IN 2013, 3,602 PEOPLE DIED ON U.S. ROADS IN ACCIDENTS
involving large trucks, according to the Insurance Institute for
Highway Safety (IIHS). Thousands more were injured. Occupants
of passenger vehicles, pedestrians, bicyclists, and motorcyclists
accounted for 84 percent of the fatalities, according to IIHS data.
Not surprisingly, those who’ve lost a loved one in such a terrible
manner have scant interest in finding common ground with the
trucking industry’s safety positions.
Safety advocates pay little heed to federal government data
showing that from 2003 to 2013, truck-involved fatalities declined
21 percent, truck-involved injuries fell 23 percent, and truck-involved fatality rates per 100 million vehicle miles traveled dropped
38 percent. They don’t want to hear about
industry proposals that might reduce accident
risk by eliminating truck trips and miles driven,
while improving the productivity of a business
crucial to the nation’s economy. They assume
supporters of such proposals are motivated to
put profits ahead of safety.
Which brings us to the Senate Appropriations
Committee’s June 25 vote approving the
Department of Transportation’s (DOT) fiscal
year 2016 funding bill. The bill included an
amendment requiring states to allow 33-foot
twin trailers on all federal aid highways, up
from the current 28-foot limit. The amendment passed by a narrow ( 16-14) margin,
reflecting its emotional and divisive nature.
Following the vote, the Advocates for
Highway and Auto Safety, an anti-truck group, spun out of control. It issued a statement calling the bill a “lethal assault on public
safety” by special trucking interests. It accused the committee of
making highways “more deadly and our families less safe” as a
result of the vote. It labeled the twin-trailer language the “FedEx
double-33s amendment” after the company that supports its
enactment.
In an e-mail, Jacqueline S. Gillan, the group’s president, said
FedEx and other backers are “running to Congress to ensure a
larger market share of freight transportation.” Gillan called Mark
Rosenker, a former chair of the National Transportation Safety
Board (NTSB), a “paid advocate” of the Coalition for Efficient &
Responsible Trucking, an alliance of less-than-truckload carriers,
trade groups, and companies lobbying for the change. Rosenker,
an adviser to the group, is using “his safety credentials as a former
NTSB board member” to push its agenda, Gillan
said in a separate communiqué.
We’ve called Congress many things, but accessory
to murder isn’t one of them. It is hard to fathom
We support the longer-trailer
proposal for the reasons outlined
above. We also have loved ones, and we know that
one highway death is one death too many. Members
of Gillan’s group are passionate and dedicated
folks. On this score, it may be impossible to meet
the industry halfway. However, the Federal Motor
Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA), which
regulates highway safety, is being pushed by its
parent agency, DOT, to retool its management and
operations. A stronger FMCSA could be far more
effective in protecting our roads than barring longer
twin-trailers. That is where advocates should focus
their energies.
Group Editorial Director
BY MITCH MAC DONALD, GROUP EDITORIAL DIRECTOR outbound
Highway hysteria