PigsDad
TUG Member
- Joined
- Nov 1, 2006
- Messages
- 10,369
- Reaction score
- 7,510
- Location
- Colorado and SW Florida
- Resorts Owned
- HGVC Elite: SeaWorld, Surf Club, Charter Club, Valdoro
I'm not denying the law exists -- what I said is that chains have never been required for passenger vehicles for I-70 from Denver to Breckenridge (the original poster's trip that they were asking about). I believe that statement is still true, so a person driving I-70 with proper tires does not have to worry about having chains. If you have experience where that stretch of 1-70 has required chains, I would be interested in when that happened. My experience is that they will close I-70 if it ever gets that bad, before they would need to enacted the chain law.Here's the skivvy on CO's Code 16. No exception that I can find for I-70 and confirmed by jlp879.
Passenger Vehicle Chain Law (Code 16)
During severe winter storms, CDOT will implement a Passenger Vehicle Chain Law (also known as a Code 16). This is the final safety measure before the highway is closed.
When the Passenger Vehicle Chain Law is in effect, every vehicle on the roadway must have chains or an alternative traction device (like AutoSock).
Fines
- Motorists driving with inadequate equipment when a Passenger Vehicle Traction Law or Chain Law is in effect could be fined more than $130.
- If a motorist blocks the roadway because he/she has inadequate equipment when a Passenger Vehicle Traction Law or Chain Law is in effect, he/she could be fined more than $650.
Kurt