The Belizean Ministry of Transport has enacted an immediate and comprehensive prohibition on the transportation of fully assembled wooden houses following a second deadly highway collision within three weeks. The decisive policy shift comes after 38-year-old Dean Perez perished in a catastrophic accident on the George Price Highway when his SUV collided with a mobile wooden structure near Mile 18.
According to official reports, the residential structure was being transported on a trailer attached to a Dodge Ram operated by Zinadine Hernandez. Investigators indicate Hernandez observed the approaching SUV traveling at high velocity with illuminated high beams in the opposing lane moments before impact. This tragedy echoes similar circumstances that claimed the life of Pastor Julian Bol on the Southern Highway just weeks earlier.
Transport CEO Chester Williams announced the sweeping regulatory changes after determining that previous restrictions limiting transport to nighttime hours remained insufficient to ensure public safety. “We have witnessed two fatal accidents during these hours and believed necessary to conduct more thorough policy evaluation,” Williams stated during official communications.
The updated mandate requires all permitted oversized load carriers to completely disassemble wooden structures before transportation. Additionally, all transports must now be accompanied by official vehicles with revolving warning lights operated by either transport or police officers. These measures aim to reduce excessive protrusion from transport vehicles and minimize hazards to motorists.
The ministry has formally notified all permit holders through written addendums to their existing authorizations, effectively immediately terminating the practice of moving assembled dwellings across Belizean roadways.
