Monthly Archives: July 2015

Senators, please vote FOR highway safety. Be sure you are informed on life & death matters.

Stop the Assault on Truck Safety

 Vote NO on S. 1732 and Any Anti-Truck Safety Provisions 

Vote YES on Any Pro-Safety Amendments to S. 1732

Make sure you have ALL the information you need to decide on these life & death matters: Truck SafetyThune bill 1732

Before & After Photos

photo of headstone

Anti-Safety Provisions of the S. 1732, the “Comprehensive Transportation and Consumer Protection Act of 2015

Every year, about 4,000 people die and 100,000 people are injured on U.S. highways in truck crashes.

Truck crash deaths have climbed dramatically for the past four years (from 2009-2013) – a 17 percent increase in deaths and a 28 percent increase in injuries.

Ninety-eight percent of fatalities in two-vehicle crashes between a large truck and a passenger car are the occupants of the passenger vehicle.

Minimum levels of insurance for trucks, set at $750,000, have not been increased in 35 years and are woefully deficient.

Increasing 28-foot double-trailer trucks to 33-foot double-trailer trucks results in a six-foot wider turning radius and a 22 foot longer stopping distance.

Key Anti-Truck Safety Provisions in S. 1732: Places Additional Burdens on an Already Resource Constrained Agency

 Sec. 2001. Correlation Study.

 The FMCSA would be required to commission a study from the Transportation Research Board to analyze the Compliance, Safety, and Accountability (CSA) program.

 It requires comparisons to outside studies (ex. GAO report) which will make it extremely difficult for the agency ever to fully comply with the requirement.

Sec. 2002. Safety Improvement Metrics.

 The Administrator would be required to develop a structure to provide positive SMS points or a new Basic for investments in select safety technologies, tools, programs, and systems not mandated by law. The legislation further requires that the positive points associated with a motor carrier’s safety investment be presented online with other SMS data.

 The awarding of points/credits will distort the correlation to crash risk and the potential impact on data quality has not been analyzed.

 This will add additional responsibilities and bureaucracy, again impacting resources that should be focused on enforcement.

 Public recognition or creation of a new BASIC for beyond compliance would be a better approach, and is included in the bill as an option.

Removes CSA Scores from Public View

Sec. 2003. Data Certification.

 SMS data alerts, scores, and percentiles would be removed from public view until the report and corrective action plan required by Sec. 2001 have been published, and recommendations completed.

 Crash and violation information will still remain public.

 CSA scores, and the analysis that goes into them, should remain public to hold motor carriers accountable.

 The data will not be made available until the Safety Improvement Metrics system developed in Sec. 2002 has been developed.

 CSA is a vitally important program and any attempts to weaken, hide, or eliminate any portion of CSA would only jeopardize the safety of the American public. This section would hide the analysis and scores for all seven BASICS.

 The safety culture in the industry has been positively impacted as a result of CSA being public.

 The inspection/enforcement efforts, collection, and analysis/dissemination of the safety performance data are all funded by taxpayers – they should remain transparent as this monitors commercial activity on our public roads, also funded by taxpayers.

Crash Weighting Determinations Do NOT Improve the Correlation to Crash Risk

Sec. 2005. Accident Report Information.

 Gives motor carriers and drivers the chance to request a review of crashes and remove from weighting or carrier safety analysis if the carrier was operating legally and the other party is found to have been at fault.

 Several studies have shown that involvement in previous truck crashes, in and of themselves and regardless of “fault”, is an accurate predictor of involvement in future truck crashes.

 FMCSA’s own report concluded, “Analysis using all crashes shows that incorporating crash weighting determinations does not consistently improve the Crash Indicator when the various weighting approaches are applied.”

 This same study determined that data sources, such as police accident reports, were not consistent or accurate enough, and that the process was not cost effective and could not be completed in a timely fashion if an appeal process was to be allowed.

 Allows motor carriers to enter into a one-sided process to have accident history expunged. Both parties may be at fault, but CMVs may escape liability if the motorist is found to have been partially responsible. There is also no clear notification and appeal process spelled out in the language, just a notice and comment period.

Sets such a Low Standard for Hiring Carriers that it will result in a Reduction in Safety.

Sec. 2102. National Hiring Standards for Motor Carriers.

 Shippers and brokers would be able to verify the eligibility of a motor carrier to transport goods under a “simplified”, interim hiring standard. If a carrier has a DOT number, minimum insurance, and does not have an unsatisfactory safety fitness determination, it would be considered fit for hiring. For lawsuits involving carriers hired under the interim hiring standard, only a shipper’s verification of suitability under the standard, crash data, and violations may be used in court.

 When a broker or shipper is no longer held accountable for hiring a dangerous carrier, it becomes a race to the bottom, as carriers will compete on price alone. The standards selected do not provide any insight on the safety performance of the carrier.

 As for access to data in civil action, courts should be allowed to determine what data is relevant to a case and the appropriate levels of responsibility. It will shield brokers and shippers in lawsuits by preventing full access to all available information – only violations and crash data would be allowed.

The entire supply chain needs to be held accountable to ensure safety.

Places More Roadblocks to Achieving Adequate Minimum Levels of Insurance for Motor Carriers

Sec. 2301. Rulemaking Requirements.

 Requirements would be established for any rulemaking associated with minimum levels of financial responsibility for motor carriers.

 This section looks to place additional hurdles as part of the rulemaking; FMCSA would have to do most of these, but it does request information on the amount of legal fees paid.

Allows for Greater Exemptions to HOS Rule

Sec. 2302. Petitions for Regulatory Relief.

 Groups would be able to petition the FMCSA for temporary and permanent exemption from hours of service regulations.

 This mirrors the petitions process already in place via regulation, but with a set timetable for consideration.

 Several temporary exemptions granted through the regulatory petitions process by the FMCSA would be made permanent.

 Providing permanent exemptions from hours of service regulations will allow trucking companies to force their drivers to work and drive even longer hours per day and per week, resulting in greater levels of fatigue.

 Enforcement would be made more difficult, as the number of groups or classes exempted increase, training and enforcement efforts will become more complex.

 This proposal is on top of the “Collins Amendment” which passed as part of the 2015 overall federal spending bill last December. That provision increased the working and driving hours of truck drivers up to 82 hours a week, and rescinded their “weekend” off. This rollback puts in place a rule under which a 2006 survey found that 65 percent of truck drivers admitted they had often or sometimes felt drowsy while driving and almost 50 percent said they had fallen asleep while driving in the past 12 months.

Allows For Inexperienced Drivers All Over the Country to Operate Large Trucks

Sec. 2503. Commercial Driver Access

 A six-year pilot program would be established to allow states to enter into interstate compacts (between contiguous states, limited to six) to allow for appropriately licensed drivers between the ages of 18 and 21 to travel in interstate commerce.

 Putting 18 year olds behind the wheels of an 80,000lb truck is reckless and will only make a bad problem worse.

 Teen drivers are widely acknowledged to have a higher crash risk, and do not have the experience or training to handle trucks.

 There is still no entry level driver training required for driving trucks, and the combination of a young, inexperienced driver with limited training and large, heavy vehicles is one that will endanger all who travel our roads.

 Allowing six compacts, with no limit between contiguous states would cover a large portion of the country.

IMG_4491

 

 

Let’s Move From: “A Failure of Compassion, & Tactics of Conceal-­‐Delay-­‐Deny While Fiery Crashes Occur” to a “Vision of Zero Fatalities”

Chrysler and the Defective Design of Jeeps with Unsafe Fuel Tanks …..
A Failure of Compassion, and Tactics of Conceal-­‐Delay-­‐Deny While Fiery Crashes Occur
by Byron Bloch, Auto Safety Expert, Potomac, Maryland
www.AutoSafetyExpert.com   Byron@AutoSafetyExpert.com
Presentation at National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
NHTSA Public Hearing on July 2nd, 2015 -­‐-­‐-­‐Washington, D.C.

“From my perspective of about 50 years in the auto safety trenches, I’ve seen that NHTSA has too often been a slowly reactive agency, rather than being pro-active in analyzing vehicle design and performance in real-world accidents.

I’ve seen where automaker documents produced in product-liability court cases reveal that the company has known of the dangers and safety defects for many years, but preferred to conceal that knowledge, then delay its release, and then deny that it ever knew what the documents revealed.

The Chrysler secretly-negotiated deal with NHTSA, without any public hearing, to provide trailer hitches as a so-called recall fix to improve fuel tank protection, but only in low-speed accidents, makes a mockery of what should be done.

Look instead to what NASCAR and helicopters and military aircraft utilize for fuel tank safety, and you’ll see safety technology that could and should be utilized. But that would require compassion… and that’s not yet a Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard.

Let’s together join forces to fight for safer vehicles for us all, with the vision of zero fatalities… by preventing vehicle accidents, and by more crashworthy vehicles to protect occupants when accidents occur, and by the elimination of needlessly unsafe and defective designs.

Thank you.” Byron Bloch

Preach it, brother! (Fine Print: And that includes truck underride guards! https://annaleahmary.com/2015/06/truck-underride-prevention-research-too-long-neglected-how-long-will-this-highway-carnage-continue/ )

Chrysler and Defective Design of Jeeps with Unsafe Fuel Tanks

Safety is not a priority 002

Different Version of Highway Safety Bill by Republicans and Democrats Reflect Different Vision of Public Safety Needs in Response to the Largest Vehicle Safety Recalls in History and Mounting Truck Crash Deaths and Injuries:  Safety Advocates JOINT STATEMENT 7-10-2015

Care for Crash Victims Monthly Report July 2015

Crash Fatalities by State 2013

Help us prove that deadly truck underride can be prevented using NASCAR SAFER Barrier concepts!

Imagine a world where a race car crashes into SAFER* Barrier soft-wall technology and a race car driver climbs out of the smashed car–waving to a cheering crowd. (It happens at most every NASCAR racetrack!)

* SAFER = Steel And Foam Energy Reduction

Now imagine a world where a car regrettably crashes into a much larger truck and SAFER technology prevents it from riding underneath the truck. The car driver and passengers get out of their mangled car–shaken up but thankful to be alive and able to tell their story.

Help us make this a true story! Every $1 donated for truck underride research through AnnaLeah & Mary for Truck Safety  will bring us closer to the goal of preventing deadly underride crashes.

AnnaLeah & Mary for Truck Safety is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.  We are eligible to receive contributions that may be tax deductible for the donor.

Donate online NOW on this site: https://www.fortrucksafety.com/

Then SHARE this need. Thank you for your help.

To read about AnnaLeah’s & Mary’s story, go here:https://annaleahmary.com/about/ 

For details about the underride guard issue, go to:https://annaleahmary.com/underride-guards/

 

Underride Research Meme

After the success of the AnnaLeah & Mary Stand Up For Truck Safety Petition, our daughter, Rebekah, set up a Twitter account  to help us raise awareness about truck safety issues.

As I was browsing Tweets one day, I was intrigued by a “Thank you!” to Dr. Dean Sicking for SAVING MANY LIVES through the SAFER barrier he designed for NASCAR:

Great shout out to one of the major safety innovators in auto racing. How many lives has Dean Sicking’s work saved? http://usat.ly/1E21Xws 

I called Dean and told him our story; then I asked him if he thought he could use the same technology to design safer underride guards on trucks. He said, “Yes!” And, a few weeks later, he sent me a detailed proposal for an underride prevention research project:

Development of Trailer Underride Preventive Measures

The only problem is that there is no one putting money toward underride research. Not a priority. So, we are launching a fundraising campaign to raise at least $200,000 to fund:  Dr. Sicking’s Underride Research Project ($138,040)–along with  College Underride Senior Design Projects (including a team of six students at Virginia Tech), and additional promising underride research by engineers who share our concern about the current underride problem and think that they can come up with an effective solution. Crash testing at IIHS for any prototypes developed could cost $25,000 for the purchase of a trailer and a car.

Plans are also underway for an Underride Roundtable in Spring 2016 to bring together engineering experts and industry representatives. We also hope to publish a compilation of all this underride research to be made available in print as well as digital format.

Please help us prevent future unnecessary deaths due to underride crashes. Every $1 contributed to this cause will enable us to support vital underride research, which will make it possible to make safer trucks and thereby save other families the heartache of such tragic loss that we know all too well.

Donate online NOW. https://www.fortrucksafety.com/

Please share this opportunity by any means you can, including the sharing buttons on the donation site or by this clickable & printable AnnaLeah & Mary for Truck Safety Underride Research brochure:  ALMFTS Underride Guard Research Brochure

The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) has been instrumental in researching and reporting on underride crash testing and our story: IIHS Status Report October 2014

Watch how Dean Sicking’s SAFER Barrier soft-wall technology protected Danica Patrick from suffering the same fate as Dale Earnhardt:

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

AnnaLeah & Mary for Truck Safety is excited to begin raising money to support NASCAR’s safety hero, Dean Sicking, research for SAFER Truck Underride Guards.

After the success of our AnnaLeah & Mary Stand Up For Truck Safety Petition, our daughter, Rebekah, set up a Twitter account  to help us raise awareness about truck safety issues.

As I was browsing Tweets one day, I was intrigued by a “Thank you!” to Dr. Dean Sicking for SAVING MANY LIVES through the SAFER barrier he designed for NASCAR. SAFER = Steel and Foam Energy Reduction:

Great shout out to one of the major safety innovators in auto racing. How many lives has Dean Sicking’s work saved? http://usat.ly/1E21Xws 

I called Dean and told him our story; then I asked him if he thought he could use the same technology to design safer underride guards. He said, “Yes!” And, a few weeks later, he sent me a detailed proposal for an Underride Prevention Research Project:

Development of Trailer Underride Preventive Measures

The only problem is that we have not found anyone who is putting money toward underride research. Not a priority. So, now we are launching a fundraising campaign to raise $200,000 to fund Dr. Sicking’s Underride Research Project–along with a college senior design underride project and additional promising underride research by engineers who share our concern about the current underride requirements and think that they can come up with a more effective solution.

Plans are also underway for an Underride Roundtable in Spring 2016 to bring together engineering experts and industry representatives. We also hope to publish a compilation of all this underride research to be made available in print as well as downloadable.

Save the Date Underride Roundtable

Please help us prevent future unnecessary deaths due to underride crashes. Every $1 contributed to this cause will help us toward our goal of supporting underride research, which will make it possible to manufacture safer trucks  and, as a result, save other families the heartache of such tragic loss.

AnnaLeah & Mary for Truck Safety is a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization and is eligible to receive contributions that may be tax deductible for the donor. Your donation will help fund research that will save lives!

AnnaLeah & Mary for Truck Safety, Articles of Incorporation filed with the State of North Carolina

To donate online, go to:
http://fortrucksafety.com/

Then SHARE this need with your friends using the sharing icons provided on that website. Thank you for your help.

Underride Research Meme

For more information about AnnaLeah & Mary’s story and for details about the underride guard issue, go to: https://annaleahmary.com/underride-guards/

Printable & clickable brochure:   ALMFTS Underride Guard Research Brochure

IIHS Report on truck underride crash tests and our story: IIHS Status Report October 2014

Watch how Dean Sicking’s SAFER Barrier soft-wall technology protected Danica Patrick from suffering the same fate as Dale Earnhardt:

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

 

 

REAL WORLD ENGINEERING for safer roads: seeking designs for improved truck underride prevention structures.

From the Society of Automotive Engineers’ (SAE) facebook page:

“REAL WORLD ENGINEERING: Marianne Karth’s goal is to prevent more deaths from truck-related crashes like the one that claimed the lives of two of her daughters. She is seeking designs for improved heavy vehicle underride prevention structures.”

https://www.facebook.com/FormulaSAE/posts/418305385022284

Rebekah photo of crash

 

http://www.sae.org/servlets/pressRoom?OBJECT_TYPE=PressReleases&PAGE=showCDSNews&EVENT=FORMULA&RELEASE_ID=3080

Designs sought for improved heavy vehicle underride prevention structures.

WARRENDALE, Pa., July 8, 2015

Current truck underride regulations too often do not prevent underride crashes—which led to 2401 fatalities in 2013. “In a detailed study of 115 rear truck crashes (not all fatal, and including all large truck types, not just tractor trailers), we found that 46 percent involved underride that extended beyond the bottom of the windshield (i.e., the truck intruded into the passenger compartment). When restricting to the 28 crashes that were fatalities, this rises to 82 percent.” (Matthew Brumbelow based on his research: Evaluation of US Rear Underride Guard Regulation for Large Trucks Using Real-World Crashes,http://www.iihs.org/iihs/topics/t/Large%20trucks/bibliography/bytag )

Engineering students and professionals will take on the challenge of creating an underride prevention system that will surpass the current U.S. and Canadian standards. Key design interests include offset impact, misaligned vehicle paths, and occupant survivability. Design is based upon a light passenger vehicle and dry van semitrailer interaction.

Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (FMVSS) No. 223 and Canadian Motor Vehicle Safety Standard (CMVSS) No. 223 describe the energy absorbing and mechanical deflection required for semi-trailers rear underride structures. NHTSA has initiated rulemaking for FMVSS No. 224 and No. 223. In the interest of this rulemaking, noteworthy designs will be presented to the NHTSA Deputy Administrator.

The objective is to attain underride prevention up to 50 mph at any degree of offset. The designs must be demonstrated to be practical in the context of the trucking environment. The hoped-for outcome is saved lives.

For more information about the underride issues go to:https://annaleahmary.com/underride-guards/

Papers should be submitted no later than May 1, 2016 (but will be reviewed as soon as received for the maximum impact) and sent to: marianne@annaleahmary.com

http://www.sae.org/servlets/pressRoom?OBJECT_TYPE=PressReleases&PAGE=showCDSNews&EVENT=FORMULA&RELEASE_ID=3080

The “Second Collision” Does Not Have To Be So Prevalent. We can do better at preventing death & horrific injuries.

Michael Lemov, in his book Car Safety Wars, sheds light on what has been responsible for so many deaths from vehicular crashes. The automotive industry has long claimed that “Safety doesn’t sell,” and consequently too-often did not include safety features in their vehicles. As a result, too many people have died from what has come to be known as the “second collision.”

Lemov describes it this way:

“During the first six decades of the twentieth century the American automobile industry seemed wedded to the idea that safe design was not its responsibility. There was no public demand, it was said, for safer automobile design. Nor did the industry seem to think it had much responsibility to inform the public about the risks of vehicle design and the omissions such as lap and shoulder belts.

“In the years before the enactment of the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act in 1966, better-designed motor vehicles might have saved millions of drivers and passengers from death and injury in what had by then become known as the ‘second collision.’ This is the collision of the driver and passengers with the interior of their own vehicle during a crash.

“The basic physics of the ‘second collision‘ were described by Hippocrates in the fourth century BC when he contrasted the greater severity of wounds inflicted by a sharp penetrating object with the less-serious wounds produced by a blunt weapon. This established that when force is distributed over a larger area (say by safety belts over the shoulders, chest, and pelvis) rather than a small area (the face or head of a driver or  passenger) the force per unit of area is much less.

“Similarly, two centuries before the invention of the automobile, Sir Isaac Newton defined the relationship between velocity and deceleration of a moving object. Simply put, the greater the distance over which vehicle deceleration occurs the less injurious the force that is imparted to the occupant body, such as the head and neck. For example, the two-foot deformation, or crushing of the front end of a vehicle, is the stopping distance of an unrestrained passenger before striking the interior of the vehicle. In the same car, the stopping distance of the same passenger wearing a lap-shoulder belt, would be much greater, as the car decelerates over many feet, causing less injurious forces to the neck, skull, and body.5

“Detroit automotive engineers, of course, knew about these principles and problems of the physics of automobiles. Since at least the 1930s they had also known of some promising solutions.6 But their employers who called the shots were deterred either by cost, perceived engineering problems, or marketing considerations from doing anything much about applying them. Mostly the companies sold annual styling changes and more horsepower.7

“The reaction of the motor vehicle industry, dominated by General Motors, Ford, and Chrysler, to the increasing toll of death and injury (from about 33,000 deaths per year in 1950 to 53,000 in 1969)–was consistent. The manufacturers placed primary blame on the driver and on driver attitudes.” (Car Safety Wars; One Hundred Years of Technology, Politics & Death, by Michael R. Lemov, pp. 49-50)

Unfortunately, a similar attitude toward safety and truck underride guards has probably meant that underride prevention technology has been woefully inadequate and many people may well have unnecessarily died as a result.

In fact, the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS) has told us in person that, “It is safer to run into a brick wall than into the back of a truck.” This is due to the fact that if you run into a brick wall with a vehicle equipped with a crush zone, that crush zone is able to go into effect and protect the occupants. However, if a vehicle hits the back of a truck and the underride guard fails, the vehicle goes under the truck so that the passenger compartment is intruded upon and the crush zone (air bags and seat belts) is not allowed to operate as designed.

George Rechnitzer, a professor and researcher from Australia who has done research with Transport and Road Safety Research (TARS) believes that the underride problem can be solved. In 2003, he authored this dissertation: The Improvement of Heavy Vehicle Design To Reduce Injury Risk In Crashes With Other Road Users.   https://www.filesanywhere.com/fs/v.aspx? (2003)v=8b6a69875e67767ca2a4

In the introduction, Rechnitzer says that,

“The thesis concludes with presenting the important concept that crash protection for
occupants is a function of the nature of the interface between the impacting vehicles
and /or the person. This hypothesis provides an alternate perspective on what is feasible
in occupant protection in severe impact scenarios. It clearly shows that contrary to a
common view in road safety, vehicle mass per se is not the major determinate of injury
outcomes. Indeed this thesis demonstrates that injury protection is feasible against high mass vehicles be they trucks, trams or trains, by appropriate design of the interface between impacting objects.

Here are crash tests of the underride prevention protection designed by George Rechnitzer:  https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCLsx40j16tnkR8qrxDY9IVQ .

Deadly second collisions do not have to be so prevalent; we can do this better!

Trip North May 2015 154

To Auto Industry: Consumers DO Care About Safety; Thanks, Scion, for choosing SAFETY over PROFIT!

The automotive industry has been saying for years that consumers don’t care about safety. What do they know?!

Read about this decision by one automotive maker to include a “precollision braking system worthy of a pricey German sedan” in one of their new affordable cars.  http://ht.ly/PeGOb

“The prevailing wisdom is that ‘young people don’t care’ about safety, said Murtha. ‘But surprisingly when we researched this stuff, they did glom on to [precollision technology]. They saw value in it.'”

Thank you, Scion, for choosing SAFETY over PROFIT!

Michael Lemov challenges the myth that consumers do not care about safety which has been perpetuated since the beginning of the automotive industry:

Car Safety Wars book cover

A Day at the Beach with AnnaLeah & Mary; and Mary Loved Thyme

71 Mary garden72 Mary garden 001

Mary loved Thyme. She ate a lot of it the last year or so. We were going to plant some at our new house the summer of 2013. I went ahead and did it without her and used some today when fixing breaded pork chops. Wish she could have been here to harvest and enjoy it.

Thyme 007

I also wish they would have been here to celebrate the Fourth with us. . .

Remembering a day at the beach with AnnaLeah & Mary in the Winter of 2013:

Ralph Nader: “Enough! Stop More Giant Truck-Trailers on Your Highways”

Ralph Nader speaks up about the battle for truck safety, calling for citizens to speak up for safer highways–a matter of life & death.

Read more here & see how you can help:  https://blog.nader.org/2015/07/02/enough-stop-more-giant-truck-trailers-on-your-highways/

Rebekah photo of crash

 

Contact Information for U.S. Senators:  http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm?OrderBy=state

Contact Information for U.S. House of Representatives:  http://www.house.gov/representatives/

See previous posts for Congress contact information:

Please use the icons below to SHARE this call for action.

 

Give the Gift of Life: Do your part to make our roads safer!

Let’s make sure that we are not always pointing our finger at someone else to take the blame for highway safety. Make sure that you are not driving impaired in any way, shape, or form: DISTRACTED, DRUNK, DRUGGED, or DROWSY (DWF)!

And, if you can do something to make trucks safer–whether you are a legislator, a government regulator, a truck driver, a trucking industry executive, or a voting/driving member of this country–do it!

Give the gift of LIFE–help prevent a crash fatality!

Mary loved to give a gift–whether it was her infectious smile, a bouquet of flowers, or an invitation to have some fun!

Remember AnnaLeah and Mary–and all those countless others who have lost their lives on the roads–and give the gift of life.

 

Who are no more with photo