Pennsylvania
Related: About this forumDeaths keep rising in Pennsylvania truck crashes
New figures put new pressure on feds to pass long-sought safety rulesPittsburgh Post-Gazette link: https://www.post-gazette.com/news/transportation/2024/04/13/truck-fatalities-highways-crashes/stories/202404110117
Nationally, deaths in crashes involving large trucks rose by 1.9%, from 5,821 in 2021 to 5,936 in 2022, even as overall traffic fatalities dropped by 1.7% from 43,230 to 42,514. The increase in fatalities comes in the midst of efforts by NHTSA and the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration to draft long-sought rules requiring new trucks to have automatic emergency braking and to have devices that limit how fast they can go.
Both regulations initially were recommended by the National Transportation Safety Board in 1995. That was almost 30 years ago. Meanwhile, other countries have adopted the technologies.
We see a very familiar pattern a heavy truck coming upon stopped traffic and the truck not being able to stop in time, said Peter Kurdock, general counsel for Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety. The thing thats so frustrating is that it's no mystery why these crashes occur and the solutions are not a mystery either.
It's well-known in Pennsylvania that we have hills, curves, tunnels, bridges, and crumbling pavement in some areas. Add to that the weather factors of ice, snow, heavy rain, fog, wind - plus the fact that many trucks prefer driving at night to avoid traffic - well, truck accidents happen too frequently here.
State and local driving speeds for large trucks is always an issue, and a major sticking point for the drivers. Automatic emergency braking will require more time for upgrading of older trucks, or perhaps grandfathering older models that can't be upgraded. It must become a priority on the interstates first, then gradually carried over into the state road system. It's a matter of public safety.
LisaM
(28,601 posts)I don't totally blame the drivers, either. I blame the intense pressure and the quotas they must be under. I don't exactly wish anyone dead, but it wouldn't break my heart if one of those semis trying to beat a deadline or make a quota crashed into one of the bean counters who sets those impossible goals.
I think we as consumers have to also accept that we can't expect to get everything overnight or in one day. I am shocked by the number of people I know who expect and even want this.
Like I said, Slow the F**k Down.
FakeNoose
(35,687 posts)He drove across the country and also north-south traffic depending on the load. My brother had to keep a log of his driving hours and they were required to stop after X number of hours driving. I think it was 48 hours but I can't remember now.
After driving those 48 hours they had to stop for a "weekend" rest-break even if they were in the middle of nowhere. That doesn't take into account that they had to deliver the load somewhere by a certain deadline. So increasing one's speed is sometimes the only way to deliver the load by deadline. It's a dangerous system.