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After a Taylor Garbage Services employee was struck and killed by a driver in Tioga County last year, a change to state law will require all vehicles to slow down and use caution around sanitation vehicles. An amendment to the “Move Over Law” was approved by the state legislature last week, seven months after 27-year-old Sean Tilghman, of Endicott, was killed outside 3550 Pennsylvania Ave. in Apalachin.

Police say Donald Ulmer, of Little Meadows, Pennsylvania, struck Tilghman as he was standing behind a Taylor garbage collection truck unloading a bin. Under the new legislation, sometimes referred to as the “Slow Down Law,” sanitation or garbage trucks would be classified as “hazard vehicles” while engaged in collecting refuse on a public roadway. This would include them in the state’s already-existing “Move Over Law,” which in part requires vehicles to change lanes or slow down when encountering police or fire vehicles parked on the roadsides. The bill is expected to be signed into law by Gov. Andrew Cuomo, and could take effect as early as Nov. 1. “We truly believe and hope that this will save lives,” Assemblywoman Donna Lupardo, D-Endwell, said Friday outside Taylor Garbage’s Vestal facility on Old Vestal Road.

In the wake of the accident that killed Tilghman, Taylor Garbage representatives called a meeting of state and local legislators last November to discuss putting the new bill together. It passed the Senate and Assembly unanimously.
Elected officials, Taylor Garbage employees and others gathered Friday outside the Old Vestal Road facility to highlight the bill’s passage. “After the loss of one of our own … we knew something needed to happen and happen fast,”  said Jared Taylor, general manager of Taylor Garbage Services Inc., in a statement.

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