Tag Archives: OOIDA

Taking On a Safety Issue: Hazardous Railroad Crossings

I made a Public Comment at the meeting of the Motor Carrier Safety Advisory Committee (MCSAC) on June 6, 2023, related to railway crossing safety. I was motivated to do so by two things.

First of all, I have listened to members of the trucking industry point to the potential of side guards causing an increase in tractor-trailer hang ups on high centered railroad crossings — using it as a basis for opposing a side guard regulation. Yet, in ten years, I have never heard them discuss how they could address this safety problem, which occurs even without side guards.

Secondly, when I was around 26, I worked as a Hospice Pilot Program Analyst for Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Michigan. After some time on the job, one of my coworkers had a baby, who was the delight of her life.  After my family moved away from the Detroit area, we kept in contact mostly through exchanging Christmas cards. One year I received a note from our former boss, who told me that my friend’s now 16 year-old had died when the car in which she was a passenger was hit by a train on her way to her high school. I wrote about her story in a post, Too Often, Too Little, Too Late; A Conspiracy of Silence , in 2015:

Fast forward to 2013, when I, too, experienced the awful devastation of losing a child [make that two] to an unexpected, horrific, potentially-preventable, premature death due to a car crash [this time hit by a truck]. Now I understood what my friend had faced.

Just recently, I tried to reach out to her again–to no avail–after I ran across the news article and the picture of baby “Joy” when going through boxes at our home. I re-read the details of the crash and discovered that there had been no flashers or guard at the fateful railroad crossing–less than a mile from her high school.

As a bereaved-mom-become-safety-advocate, I wanted to know if something had been done to improve safety at the site of that crash 34 years ago. I was encouraged to find out, from the township responsible for that section of roads, that they had bypassed the option of flashers and guards and immediately closed off that particular dirt road where it crossed the tracks.

A good move. Chances are it saved someone. But it was Too Late for Joy.

Why does it Too Often take a death to wake us up to the dangers that were there all along?”

I did not hear from my friend for 40 years because her grief was so intense and it was hard for her to see me with my family of nine living children. In 2020, out of the blue, I received an email from her. Among other things, she shared with me what she and her husband and younger daughter had done following their tragic loss:

[We] took on the State of Michigan after the train crash that killed [Joy and her friend Hope].  After a public hearing, we convinced the state to close the railroad crossing near [the] High School where the crash occurred.  The crossing was at the bottom of a gravel hill and no warning lights or gates were at the site.  State inspectors would park at the top of the hill and walk down to “inspect” it, too concerned to drive down. The site could not be fixed to make it safe for others and the road leading to it is now closed.  No one else will die there.  During our investigation, we found that many other dangerous railroad sites like this exist.  I was too devastated to do anything about those sites in the way you have, and I admire your courage for that.

June 6, 2023

Administrator Hutcheson,

I hope that FMCSA will seriously consider our attached petition and do what is within your power to make railway crossings safer.

Respectfully,

Jerry & Marianne Karth

Here’s our petition to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration: Petition to the FMCSA for Railway Crossing Safety Measures

Here’s our petition a few days earlier to the Federal Railroad Administration: Petition to the FRA for Railway Crossing Safety Measures

Relevant Resources On This Topic:

What can we learn about industry concerns regarding a potential side guard regulation?

OOIDA supports stronger rear guards but not adding side guards. What more do they need to know?

WUSA9 interviewed OOIDA (Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association) about the STOP Underrides Bill. Watch the latest segment of their truck underride investigative series in which OOIDA publicly committed themselves to supporting strengthening rear underride guard standards.

That’s great news. They’ve apparently seen the value of making truck crashes more survivable when cars rear-end trucks. However, it is puzzling to hear them, at the same time, oppose side guard technology which can also prevent people from dying under trucks — in this case, at the sides.

OOIDA said all the research – and crash tests like the one staged last year, just blocks from Capitol Hill, to draw attention to the fight for new underride safety requirements – doesn’t convince their organization side guards will be worth the investment.

“My last semi-trailer was $42,000 just with that trailer,” Pugh said. “So now we’re looking at upping the price another $2,000 to $3,000. That’s hard for a little guy to eat. That’s hard for a big guy to eat. There’s not that much profit in this business and if you want me to buy this technology and buy into this technology, you’re going to need to show me it works.” Lewie Pugh, executive vice president of the Owner-Operated Independent Truck Driver Association or OOIDA, which represents more than 160,000 members nationwide.

Pugh wants more government (read that taxpayer) funded side guard research:

Pugh says that means real-world testing. Prototypes, paid for by the government, studied by a federal agency like the Department of Transportation for effectiveness.

Perhaps he’s unaware of the side guard study conducted by Texas A&M on a contract from NHTSA (with taxpayer money) published in April 2018.

Is he aware of the untold number of hours put in by researchers and engineers to study and solve the underride problem over the past five decades? Here it is in a nutshell: History of Underride Research & Reports: 1896 to 2019

Maybe he doesn’t realize that the AngelWing side guard — successfully tested by the IIHS at 35 and 40 mph and by its inventor at 47.2 mph — has been installed on multiple trucks for several years and traveled thousands of miles without operational issues.

What exactly would convince him that underride protection on the sides of large trucks — promised by DOT on March 19, 1969 — can truly mean the difference between life and death? Or that they are not “too costly”?

Back-of-the-Envelope Math for Underride Protection Retrofit Cost/Trailer Equation

There are major developments in the fight to require lifesaving equipment on big rigs driving next to you on the road. Safety advocates say it could help prevent devastating crashes known as underride accidents.

One of the nation’s largest trucking groups now says it is open to some of the proposed requirements. But the question remains if the industry’s concessions will go far enough for the families of accident victims.

Read more of the story here: https://bit.ly/3awIaxU #Underrides#BigRigs#TruckUnderrides#TruckCrash#TruckDrivers

Rebuttal to Concerns Raised By the ATA About Proposed Underride Legislation

From the very beginning of our journey to make truck crashes more survivable with the installation of effective underride protection, we have been reaching out to members of the trucking industry — manufacturers, transport companies, truck drivers, industry associations, and engineers among others. We have found some who are cooperative and many who are committed to working on solutions. However, we have also observed a reluctance to move forward with R&D — not to mention installation of solutions.

Beyond industry hesitation, we have also read about and listened to outright opposition. While I appreciate that they would find it important to express concerns they might have about the legislation and the technology, I do not find it helpful if their statements are not backed up with facts or documentation — especially when there is little openness to sit down together and discuss how to address those concerns collaboratively.

I remain hopeful that we can yet reach that point where we will be able to hold conversations through the process laid out in the STOP Underrides Act for a Committee On Underride Protection. It holds the potential for cooperation, transparency, and accountability which could help us reach the goal of ending preventable death by underride in a timely fashion.

Meanwhile, because I have been unable to get them to participate in a meeting to discuss these concerns, I am going to share two documents here:

  1. A letter which the American Trucking Associations emailed to Members of the Transportation & Infrastructure Committee’s Highway & Transit Subcommittee on June 19, 2019, following the trucking hearing on June 12, 2019. The ATA letter outlines their concerns about, and opposition to, the STOP Underrides! Act. ATA Stop Underrides Act Follow Up Opposition Letter 6.19.19
  2. A rebuttal to that letter — detailing what we have discovered over the last several years regarding those concerns. RESPONSE to ATA Stop Underrides Opposition Letter

May we allow nothing to interfere with reaching the goal of protecting all travelers from the unimaginable injuries and grief which all too often come about when we don’t equip our trucks with underride protection so that passenger vehicles and vulnerable road users cannot go under them.

Rose, Star Wars: The Force Awakens

“Words without facts” is Propaganda

There is no trucker who would want to be a part of a tragic under-ride crash and there is no just-lawmaker who would feel content with having the opportunity to do something and remain silent and out of the conversation.

That’s what I read in a recent blogpost. If only the trucking industry would recognize that fact, re-examine some of their wrong-headed thinking, and get behind the win/win STOP Underrides! Bill.

I’d like to take a stab at correcting some of the misunderstanding floating around out there about the STOP Underrides! Bill. I’m concerned that “words without facts,” if left unchallenged, is propaganda with power to confuse the uninformed.

(Note: I know that this post is lengthy and not the easiest to read format. I wanted to get it published before heading back to D.C. So I will try and edit it to correct errors in links and messy format as soon as possible.  Thank you for your patience.)

So what words have been said about the STOP Underrides! Bill?

`From the OOIDA Letter of  Opposition:

  • OOIDA is the largest trade association representing the views and interests of small-business truckers and professional drivers. We have more than 160,000 members nationwide, all of which would be directly impacted by S. 665. This raises an interesting question. I have personally asked the management of OOIDA to provide me with information about how many owner-operators own their own trailer. He said that he did not have those numbers. Although numbers (1.2 trailer/owner-operator) are listed online, I have seen no documentation that this is the case. I’d love to have proof of this claim but, until then, it does not seem valid to make a blanket statement that all of the OOIDA members would be directly impacted without spelling out what that means.
  • Over the last several decades, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has considered numerous options involving underride guards, but has consistently concluded federal mandates would be impractical and costly, thus outweighing any perceived safety benefits. The reintroduction of the Stop Underrides Act intentionally disregards this reality and ignores the safety, economic, and operational concerns we raised with you last Congress. Many Public Comments were submitted to the Federal Register, in response to NHTSA proposed underride rulemaking, which raised questions about the validity of the NHTSA cost/benefit analysis. Additionally, Senator Gillibrand responded to all of the concerns, which OOIDA raised in their January 2018 letter, in a letter which she sent to OOIDA on March 16, 2018. Read her reply here.
  • To be clear, OOIDA supports efforts to improve highway safety. In fact, we agree the existing rear underride guard on trailers – commonly referred to as a “DOT Bumper” in the United States – could be enhanced to reduce the risk of rear underrides for personal automobiles. If the Canadian standard was applied in the U.S. on the manufacture of new trailers, we would not oppose it. Actually, many of the trailers on the road today in the U.S. already meet the Canadian standard because U.S. transport companies which cross the border need to comply with it. So the U.S. trailer manufacturers responded to that situation. However, those are the same guards which have been tested by the IIHS and found to be ineffective and too weak to withstand offset crashes — even at 35 mph. So simply upgrading the U.S. standard to meet the Canadian standard would not solve the problem — underride, with deadly Passenger Compartment Intrusion (PCI), would still be occurring.The eight major trailer manufacturers have exceeded the Canadian standard by stepping up to meet the new de facto standard of the IIHS ToughGuard award. It is that standard which we are requesting be mandated by the STOP Underrides legislation to ensure that it is installed on every new trailer manufactured. As of this date, some manufacturers are still selling the older, ineffective rear guard as Standard with the improved guard being offered as Optional.In addition, there are millions of existing trailers on the road today which still will allow deadly passenger compartment intrusion upon collision. Yet, there are Retrofit Kitsavailable for $500 (or less) which can be installed to upgrade the safety level of rear guards — compared to the $125 it would cost to replace rusted, cracked or bent horizontal tubes at the existing level of ineffective protection.
  • Unfortunately, S. 665 goes too far. Regarding rear underride guards, it would mandate truckers install them on trailers that can’t physically accommodate them, such as low boys, household goods trailers, auto transporters, etc. The mandate would retroactively apply to all trailers, including those nearing the end of their service. This comment ignores a basic fact about federal standards. If a CMV is designed in a way that underride is not possible (i.e., there is no geometric mismatch because the truck body is low enough to engage with the passenger vehicle bumper), then, of course, the manufacturer or owner can apply for an exemption. Why would we demand installation of unnecessary equipment?
  • 665 would also mandate the installation of side underride guards. While existing technologies may reduce passenger compartment intrusion in certain situations, the bill fails to recognize numerous other issues limiting the real world practicality of side underride guards. For example, installation of the equipment would unquestionably create challenges for truckers navigating grade crossings and high curbs, backing in to sloped loading docks, properly utilizing spread-axle trailer configurations, conducting DOT-required trailer inspections, and accessing vital equipment located under the trailer – such as brakes. We also want to reiterate S. 665 would mandate side underride guards on trailers that can’t physically accommodate them, such as intermodal, bulk, specialized, and flatbed trailersThis comment uses an interesting choice of words, e.g., claiming that side guards would “unquestionably” create challenges for truckers. As far as I can tell, these statements are all based on speculation rather than proven fact or documentation. See this post for a lengthy reply to these concerns.
  • 665 also mandates a front underride guard on CMVs. Admittedly, we’re less familiar with these devices, because they aren’t currently commercially available in the U.S. However, similar to the rear and side underride guard provisions, this requirement would likely be extremely problematic for reasons we can discuss in more detail at a later time. I am confident that, if OOIDA genuinely delved into the front underride/override problem — as I did — they would find that there are practical solutions available to change the outcome of crashes which involve trucks rear-ending passenger vehicles or head-on collisions. In fact, U.S. truck manufacturers have patents for front underride protection devices and some are already selling them in countries which have a FUP mandate — including EuropeIndiaJapan, and Australia.
  • We would also point out that the bill would require the creation of performance standards for underride devices. Meaning, if an underride guard fails to meet the standard while in operation, the vehicle would be placed out of service and unable to operate. We have no idea how a trucker would get a side underride guard, weighing approximately 1,000 pounds, delivered to the roadside. Admittedly, it is a challenge to get trucks safely off the road to a repair facility when they have underride protection in a condition which makes them unsafe to travel around. The Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance ( CVSA ) has addressed this concern in their consultation with the bill sponsors regarding the bill language. But do we just ignore the problem when it is challenging? Do we simply allow the truck driver to continue on with business as usual? Besides, ideally, the truck driver/transport company will do regular pre-trip inspections of the underride protection and address the problem with preventive maintenance or appropriate repair BEFORE the truck ever gets on the road.Furthermore, OOIDA does not appear to have done their research regarding the weight of side guards currently available. The AngelWing upon early production was weighing in at 800 pounds and has, since then, been reduced to about 500 pounds. Likewise, the Wabash Trailers side guard prototype was reported to weigh approximately 500 pounds.
  • Nor do we have any idea how the equipment would be installed on the roadside. In sum, the bill mandates devices that aren’t practical, that don’t physically work, and that would create operational impossibilities. We should also note that the bill impacts millions of CMVs, trailers, straight trucks, and other vehicles. With an estimated price tag of tens of billions of dollars, S. 665 would implement the single most costly federal trucking mandate in history. It seems irresponsible to make a claim about an estimated price tag of tens of billions of dollars. DOT is reportedly a data-driven agency. Please provide specifics as to the equation for reaching conclusions about a safety countermeasure which could save countless lives. In fact, the previous cost/benefit analysis reported by NHTSA actually uses underride data which is well-known to be undercounted. As is also a widely-accepted fact, once the safety equipment is mandated, solutions and manufacturers are likely to rise up to meet the need. Costs will likely go down from their current amounts with competition in the marketplace and improvement of designs/products.Let’s do some of our own back of the envelope math. Just for the sake of discussion, let’s say that a tractor-trailer owner put $3,400 into underride protection equipment — and that’s for a retrofit. Divide that $3,400 into 15 years average trailer life and you have $227/year or $0.62/week. Don’t forget IRS Section 179 allows a tax deduction for business equipment.And on what information does OOIDA base their claim that “S. 665 would implement the single most costly federal trucking mandate in history”? From what I read, the Electronic Logging Device (ELD) mandate cost truck owners on average $495/truck/year. And read what that website says about the rumors spread about prohibitive costs of ELDs which would put trucking companies out of business (sound familiar?): Considering the overall operational costs of a trucking business, ELD investment doesn’t rank when compared to operating expenses, like fuel, liability insurance, tractor-trailer equipment, and permitting costs.Is it truly inappropriate to think that safety equipment, like underride protective devices, should be considered a normal, acceptable Cost Of Doing Business (CODB)?While we’re at it, please answer a question which I have had for several years now. . . even if you estimate the industry’s safety budget at $9.6 billion, as Chris Spear did in a conversation with me in March 2017, please tell me what percentage that is of the total operating budget — or revenue or profit or whatever figure you want to use — for the trucking industry.

    Well, if they don’t want to tell me, I’ll have to estimate it myself. This article quotes ATA as saying that in 2017 the trucking industry revenue was $700.3 billion. That would mean that the safety budget (which included drug tests for drivers) was 1.4%. What is included in that?

    These investments include technologies on the truck such as collision avoidance systems, electronic logging devices for driver hours of service compliance and video event recorders. They also include driver safety training, driver safety incentive pay, and compliance with safety regulations (e.g., pre-employment and random drug tests and motor vehicle record checks). The largest investment category is in driver safety training, equaling 36% of all investment. Driver safety training was followed by expenditures in compliance with safety rules (26%), on-board safety technologies (25%) and driver safety incentive pay (13%).https://www.trucking.org/ATA%20Docs/News%20and%20Information/Reports%20Trends%20and%20Statistics/06%2028%2016%20-%20Trucking%20Industry%20Invests%20%249%205%20Billion%20in%20Safety%20Annually.pdf

    OOIDA hasn’t shared with us their back of the envelope math equation. But here is mine:

    Let’s say that there are approximately 2 million existing trailers and 300,000 new trailers/year. Make that 2,500,000 or even 3,000,000 x $3,000/tractor-trailer = $9,000,000,000 or $9 billion. That would be 1.3% of the revenue amount. Is that an unreasonable cost of doing business?

    If 1000 lives were saved (plus untold catastrophic, debilitating injuries prevented), that would be $9,000,000/life saved. The DOT sets the Value of a Saved Life (VSL) at $9.6 million.

    Obviously, that amount includes retrofitting existing trailers which would not have to be repeated every year. But, even with this rough math calculations, I’m having a hard time seeing what is causing a panic.

    Furthermore, is OOIDA helping their membership to look at the broad picture of how comprehensive underride protection can actually benefit the trucking industry? That includes the greatly decreased insurance risk when truck crashes lead to fewer fatalities.

  • We would encourage you to learn more about the trucking industry, including its incredible diversity, before continuing to promote S. 665. One-size-fits-all solutions simply don’t work. I would encourage OOIDA, and others in the trucking industry, to thoroughly do their due diligence on the underride problem and solutions. Take it on as collaborative challenge to reach a mutually-beneficial goal: safer trucking. Take advantage of the upcoming opportunity to witness an underride crash and two successful side underride protective devices firsthand at the D.C. Underride Crash Test on March 26.As a bonus, here are my responses to concerns expressed by the American Trucking Associations (ATA) about the STOP Underrides! Bill:Question for the ATA: Is it necessary to choose EITHER crash avoidance OR occupant protection — not BOTH?My knee-jerk reaction to the ATA Letter of Opposition to the STOP Underrides! Bill

Actually, let’s address the March 14, 2019 letter of opposition from ATA directly:

  • . . . safety anchors the very foundation of the trucking industry, shaping our core values and decision-making. If that were true, then why have they been opposing underride initiatives for years and not taken an active role in making sure that the underride problem was solved?
  • This legislation, while a well-intended heartfelt response to family tragedy, seeks to address a certain type of truck involved accident through a highly prescriptive industry-wide mandate. Oh, my goodness! First of all, as one of the co-authors of the STOP Underrides! Bill, I declare that a ridiculous statement! Thousands of people lost their lives to underride long before our truck crash took place on May 4, 2013. The underride problem did not start with my family’s tragedy. Underride is a factor of the geometric mismatch between bumpers of cars and trucks which started way back when they started to share the road. (1915 side guard patent)
  • Regrettably, the bill is not based on science, data or safety benefit. Upon what is that statement based? What do they call the crash testing done on side guards and rear guards and front underride/override protection? How do they define science and data? In fact, what kind of data and science or they even looking for? Give me some clarification here. Are they calling into question the testing capability of crash testing facilities and universities and engineers around the country? And, jeepers creepers, what on earth do they even mean by safety benefit?!?!?!!?
  • Moreover, it ignores potential technical issues a mandate of this nature raises,  Please see my comments to similar concerns raised by OOIDA. Furthermore, let me say here that the bill did not come out of thin air or the imaginations of two grieving moms. It is entirely based upon consultation with qualified engineers beginning with a working group which gathered at the Washington, D.C., offices of the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety in June 2016 after the First Underride Roundtable which took place at the IIHS Ruckersville, Virginia, testing facility on May 5, 2016. This group included representatives from Virginia Tech, IIHS, safety organizations, side guard designers, crash reconstructionists, the ATA, the Truck Trailer Manufacturing Association (TTMA), and a trailer manufacturer. Following this meeting, there was collaboration on a consensus document submitted to the Department of Transportation in September 2016. This document formed the basis of the original draft of the STOP Underrides! Bill. It was later refined with the help of legislative counsel before being introduced on December 12, 2017, and again on March 5, 2019.
  • . . . as well as the other technologies that exist for addressing these and other crashes, such as automatic emergency braking, camera monitoring systems, and adaptive turning assist. Those who want to end all preventable traffic fatalities take a safe system approach which recognizes that there is not just one cause of crashes and not just one way to reduce traffic fatalities. To put all your eggs in the basket of CRASH AVOIDANCE TECHNOLOGIES would be foolish and ineffective — especially when underride protection does not depend on driver behavior to work. Besides which, I have it on good authority that, at present, AEB in cars does not reliably detect large trucks. And, of course, as we all know, it will take some time before effective crash avoidance technologies are in the fleet 100%. Meanwhile, thousands of people could be saved through the use of comprehensive underride protection.
  • Finally, the bill ignores the diversity of our industry. In trucking, we know that one size does not fit all, and that investments in certain technologies that one company makes may not make sense for another. I have no idea who started that rumor. In fact, the bill does not prescribe a one size fits all solution. Rather, the bill calls a performance standard — meaning that the manufacturers/engineers would create design solutions which would be proven through crash testing to prevent underride and Passenger Compartment Intrusion (PCI). We have already seen two engineers design completely different solutions to the side underride problem — both of them effective. In this country (well, this planet), we have an amazing pool of engineering minds and resources. I say, give them the green light to tackle the problem of underride!
  • Standards for new and in-service truck equipment should be based on sound economic and engineering principles that enhance safety, take into account real-world operations, and weigh possible unintended consequences. Again, where have they been? Have they not seen the research that has been done on front, side, and rear underride protection? What are they talking about? They certainly don’t specify. What do they mean, “enhance safety? And clearly they have never closely investigated the details of underride crashes. What unintended consequences are they referring to (they don’t elaborate a great deal) and what could be worse than having a truck enter your part of the car and crush or shatter your body?
  • As an example of an unintended consequence, in comments filed with the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) in May 2016, the Truck Trailer Manufacturers Association (TTMA) noted a European trailer manufacturer’s experience of trailer failures due to the increased rigidity in the trailer structure from
    added frame supports for side underride guards. The trailers were less flexible when operated over uneven road surfaces or on surfaces that produced twisting forces, which led to the trailers becoming disabled during highway use, presenting safety risks to other motorists. Okay, so they give a specific example here. This is talking about the problem in Europe with the Krone company’s side guards. First of all, if such a problem occurs, surely this should be detected through regular inspection and preventive maintenance. Secondly, an installed AngelWing side guard has had multiple miles on the road without incidence. And, third, if the industry were only willing to put resources into R&D of underride protection, any glitches or weaknesses in the equipment could be addressed. Engineers love to solve problems. If we gave up before even trying on every kind of technology, I would not even be typing these words on my computer or searching for valuable information on the internet or myriad other activities. Get my drift?
  • High-centering incidents already occur when operators of low frame trailers misjudge clearance heights at railroad crossings, which can result in tractor-trailers becoming stranded on railroad tracks. If all commercial vehicles were to have substantial side underride guards, as this bill requires, high-centering incidents would likely become more frequent. I addressed this question in the OOIDA letter. But I want to add that I recently looked up this issue and it really isn’t unique to side guards but a broader problem with infrastructure and routes. This is certainly something which could be discussed as a part of the Committee On Underride Protection.

    The Federal Railway Administration keeps a list of all railroad crossings with low ground clearance and posted signage like this: W10-5 Low Ground Clearance Railroad Crossing Sign

    So, do truck drivers plan their routes and search  this data base and look for crossings to avoid — with or without side guards?!?!!?!?!?!
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DCyb85kZm-w Charter bus got hung up on railroad tracks.
    Is there a physical fix? Not always. That leaves it up to the driver’s judgment.
    Up to city and county officials to work on crossings.
     
  • We need to be smart in directing safety-related resources, leveraging industry investments to result in the greatest potential benefit to highway safety, which is the only way we can hope to achieve the goal of accident and fatality-free highways. Clearly they do not have a Vision Zero or Toward Zero Deaths attitude — though supposedly NHTSA does, as does the House Highways & Transit Subcommittee — Every Life Counts.
  • The STOP Underrides Act would divert a significant amount of NHTSA and industry resources away from important crash avoidance technologies with wide-ranging benefits in all types of crashes to focus on a narrow type of crash and specific countermeasure unproven in real-world applications. Unproven? What kind of proof are they looking for? And NHTSA has had a lot of the work done for them already in the Bill and by engineers.
  • The Stop Underrides Act also fails to consider numerous complicating factors such as engineering tradeoffs involving weight, strength, and effectiveness of side guards. Currently, the only testing that has been accomplished involves a closed course staged dry van 53’ trailer with a dummy car speeding perfectly perpendicular at its side underride guard well below highway speed limits. Furthermore, the bill raises
    significant operational issues related to ground clearance, moveable trailer axles, and the diversity of truck and trailer designs. For example, the ridged specified design of side underrides would not work well with tank and bulk trailers that are cylindrical in size and require underbelly accessibility; flatbed trailers, which unloaded, are naturally curved to suppress weight; and intermodal trailers that are shipped and locked onto specific designed chassis for hauling. Simply put, these glaring operational concerns do not signify real world applicability, nor justify an industry-wide mandate.  Come on, people! A lot of these questions will be answered in the R&D process once the ball gets rolling. Have they no business sense? The people who have been working on solutions have been doing it out of their own pocket. Investors don’t want to invest until they know there is a market. It is a chicken & egg dilemma, a Catch 22. And until the industry recognizes the benefit to them and/or the government finally sees the light and issues a mandate, it will be in limbo and guess who will continue to pay the price!

A Mom’s Response to the OOIDA Letter of Opposition to the Life-preserving #STOPUnderrides! Bill

The STOP Underrides! Bill was re-introduced into Congress on March 5, 2019. On March 7, the Owner Operator Independent Drivers Association wrote a letter of opposition and sent it to the bill’s sponsors.

The following is a combination of the OOIDA letter (bolded) and my response.

Response to the OOIDA Letter of Opposition

(dated March 7, 2019)

To the STOP Underrides Bill

Dear Senator Gillibrand and Senator Rubio,

The purpose of this letter is to convey the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association’s (OOIDA) strong opposition to S. 665, the Stop Underrides Act, which would mandate the installation of rear, side and front underride guards on all commercial motor vehicles (CMV) and trailers that exceed 10,000 pounds in gross vehicle weight (GVW).

OOIDA is the largest trade association representing the views and interests of small-business truckers and professional drivers. We have more than 160,000 members nationwide, all of which would be directly impacted by S. 665.

This raises an interesting question. I have personally asked the management of OOIDA to provide me with information about how many owner-operators own their own trailer. He said that he did not have those numbers. Although numbers (1.2 trailer/owner-operator) are listed online, I have seen no documentation that this is the case. I’d love to have proof of this claim but, until then, it does not seem valid to make a blanket statement that all of the OOIDA members would be directly impacted without spelling out what that means.

Over the last several decades, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration has considered numerous options involving underride guards, but has consistently concluded federal mandates would be impractical and costly, thus outweighing any perceived safety benefits. The reintroduction of the Stop Underrides Act intentionally disregards this reality and ignores the safety, economic, and operational concerns we raised with you last Congress.

Many Public Comments were submitted to the Federal Register, in response to NHTSA proposed underride rulemaking, which raised questions about the validity of the NHTSA cost/benefit analysis. Additionally, Senator Gillibrand responded to all of the concerns, which OOIDA raised in their January 2018 letter, in a letter which she sent to OOIDA on March 16, 2018. Read her reply here.

To be clear, OOIDA supports efforts to improve highway safety. In fact, we agree the existing rear underride guard on trailers – commonly referred to as a “DOT Bumper” in the United States – could be enhanced to reduce the risk of rear underrides for personal automobiles. If the Canadian standard was applied in the U.S. on the manufacture of new trailers, we would not oppose it.

Actually, many of the trailers on the road today in the U.S. already meet the Canadian standard because U.S. transport companies which cross the border need to comply with it. So the U.S. trailer manufacturers responded to that situation. However, those are the same guards which have been tested by the IIHS and found to be ineffective and too weak to withstand offset crashes — even at 35 mph. So simply upgrading the U.S. standard to meet the Canadian standard would not solve the problem — underride, with deadly Passenger Compartment Intrusion (PCI), would still be occurring.

The eight major trailer manufacturers have exceeded the Canadian standard by stepping up to meet the new de facto standard of the IIHS ToughGuard award. It is that standard which we are requesting be mandated by the STOP Underrides legislation to ensure that it is installed on every new trailer manufactured. As of this date, some manufacturers are still selling the older, ineffective rear guard as Standard with the improved guard being offered as Optional.

In addition, there are millions of existing trailers on the road today which still will allow deadly passenger compartment intrusion upon collision. Yet, there are Retrofit Kits available for $500 (or less) which can be installed to upgrade the safety level of rear guards — compared to the $125 it would cost to replace rusted, cracked or bent horizontal tubes at the existing level of ineffective protection.

Unfortunately, S. 665 goes too far. Regarding rear underride guards, it would mandate truckers install them on trailers that can’t physically accommodate them, such as low boys, household goods trailers, auto transporters, etc. The mandate would retroactively apply to all trailers, including those nearing the end of their service.

This comment ignores a basic fact about federal standards. If a CMV is designed in a way that underride is not possible (i.e., there is no geometric mismatch because the truck body is low enough to engage with the passenger vehicle bumper), then, of course, the manufacturer or owner can apply for an exemption. Why would we demand installation of unnecessary equipment?

665 would also mandate the installation of side underride guards. While existing technologies may reduce passenger compartment intrusion in certain situations, the bill fails to recognize numerous other issues limiting the real world practicality of side underride guards. For example, installation of the equipment would unquestionably create challenges for truckers navigating grade crossings and high curbs, backing in to sloped loading docks, properly utilizing spread-axle trailer configurations, conducting DOT-required trailer inspections, and accessing vital equipment located under the trailer – such as brakes. We also want to reiterate S. 665 would mandate side underride guards on trailers that can’t physically accommodate them, such as intermodal, bulk, specialized, and flatbed trailers.

This comment uses an interesting choice of words, e.g., claiming that side guards would “unquestionably” create challenges for truckers. As far as I can tell, these statements are all based on speculation rather than proven fact or documentation. As far as ground clearance (a complaint heard over and over), please see this University of West Virginia study: Development of Design Vehicles for Hang-Up Problem

Here is a quote from the inventor of the AngelWing side guard, Perry Ponder:

AngelWing has undergone extensive standard industry testing and analysis including durability track testing. Designed by a trailer engineer (me), AngelWing works in harmony with existing trailer designs with no effect on the trailer structure or durability.

Here is a video of a trailer with Aaron Kiefer’s SafetySkirt side guard backing over a raised median without any problem:

Further, because the bill applies the underride guard mandate to all CMVs in excess of 10,000 pounds GVW, it would require dually trucks pulling wedge trailers – commonly referred to as “hot shots” – to install these devices. Yet, the exact same dually not operating commercially wouldn’t be required to have them. Here again, most wedge trailers can’t physically accommodate what this bill would mandate.

As stated previously, this comment ignores a basic fact about federal standards. If a CMV is designed in a way that underride is not possible (i.e., there is no geometric mismatch because the truck body is low enough to engage with the passenger vehicle bumper), then, of course, the manufacturer or owner can apply for an exemption. Why would we demand installation of unnecessary equipment? If it is a matter of a unique truck design, which would allow underride if there were no added protection but presents installation challenges, then I would call upon the engineering community to create collaborative solutions. In fact, the bill encourages such communication through the establishment of a Committee On Underride Protection.

665 also mandates a front underride guard on CMVs. Admittedly, we’re less familiar with these devices, because they aren’t currently commercially available in the U.S. However, similar to the rear and side underride guard provisions, this requirement would likely be extremely problematic for reasons we can discuss in more detail at a later time.

I am confident that, if OOIDA genuinely delved into the front underride/override problem — as I did — they would find that there are practical solutions available to change the outcome of crashes which involve trucks rear-ending passenger vehicles or head-on collisions. In fact, U.S. truck manufacturers have patents for front underride protection devices and some are already selling them in countries which have a FUP mandate — including Europe, India, Japan, and Australia.

We would also point out that the bill would require the creation of performance standards for underride devices. Meaning, if an underride guard fails to meet the standard while in operation, the vehicle would be placed out of service and unable to operate. We have no idea how a trucker would get a side underride guard, weighing approximately 1,000 pounds, delivered to the roadside.

Admittedly, it is a challenge to get trucks safely off the road to a repair facility when they have underride protection in a condition which makes them unsafe to travel around. The Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance ( CVSA ) has addressed this concern in their consultation with the bill sponsors regarding the bill language. But do we just ignore the problem when it is challenging? Do we simply allow the truck driver to continue on with business as usual? Besides, ideally, the truck driver/transport company will do regular pre-trip inspections of the underride protection and address the problem with preventive maintenance or appropriate repair BEFORE the truck ever gets on the road.

Furthermore, OOIDA does not appear to have done their research regarding the weight of side guards currently available. The AngelWing upon early production was weighing in at 800 pounds and has, since then, been reduced to about 500 pounds. Likewise, the Wabash Trailers side guard prototype was reported to weigh approximately 500 pounds.

Nor do we have any idea how the equipment would be installed on the roadside. In sum, the bill mandates devices that aren’t practical, that don’t physically work, and that would create operational impossibilities. We should also note that the bill impacts millions of CMVs, trailers, straight trucks, and other vehicles. With an estimated price tag of tens of billions of dollars, S. 665 would implement the single most costly federal trucking mandate in history.

It seems irresponsible to make a claim about an estimated price tag of tens of billions of dollars. DOT is reportedly a data-driven agency. Please provide specifics as to the equation for reaching conclusions about a safety countermeasure which could save countless lives. In fact, the previous cost/benefit analysis reported by NHTSA actually uses underride data which is well-known to be undercounted. As is also a widely-accepted fact, once the safety equipment is mandated, solutions and manufacturers are likely to rise up to meet the need. Costs will likely go down from their current amounts with competition in the marketplace and improvement of designs/products.

Let’s do some of our own back of the envelope math. Just for the sake of discussion, let’s say that a tractor-trailer owner put $3,400 into underride protection equipment — and that’s for a retrofit. Divide that $3,400 into 15 years average trailer life and you have $227/year or $0.62/week. Don’t forget IRS Section 179 allows a tax deduction for business equipment.

And on what information does OOIDA base their claim that “S. 665 would implement the single most costly federal trucking mandate in history”? From what I read, the Electronic Logging Device (ELD) mandate cost truck owners on average $495/truck/year. And read what that website says about the rumors spread about prohibitive costs of ELDs which would put trucking companies out of business (sound familiar?): Considering the overall operational costs of a trucking business, ELD investment doesn’t rank when compared to operating expenses, like fuel, liability insurance, tractor-trailer equipment, and permitting costs.

Is it truly inappropriate to think that safety equipment, like underride protective devices, should be considered a normal, acceptable Cost Of Doing Business (CODB)?

While we’re at it, please answer a question which I have had for several years now. . . even if you estimate the industry’s safety budget at $9.6 billion, as Chris Spear did in a conversation with me in March 2017, please tell me what percentage that is of the total operating budget — or revenue or profit or whatever figure you want to use — for the trucking industry.

Well, if they don’t want to tell me, I’ll have to estimate it myself. This article quotes ATA as saying that in 2017 the trucking industry revenue was $700.3 billion. That would mean that the safety budget (which included drug tests for drivers) was 1.4%. What is included in that?

These investments include technologies on the truck such as collision avoidance systems, electronic logging devices for driver hours of service compliance and video event recorders. They also include driver safety training, driver safety incentive pay, and compliance with safety regulations (e.g., pre-employment and random drug tests and motor vehicle record checks). The largest investment category is in driver safety training, equaling 36% of all investment. Driver safety training was followed by expenditures in compliance with safety rules (26%), on-board safety technologies (25%) and driver safety incentive pay (13%). https://www.trucking.org/ATA%20Docs/News%20and%20Information/Reports%20Trends%20and%20Statistics/06%2028%2016%20-%20Trucking%20Industry%20Invests%20%249%205%20Billion%20in%20Safety%20Annually.pdf

OOIDA hasn’t shared with us their back of the envelope math equation. But here is mine:

Let’s say that there are approximately 2 million existing trailers and 300,000 new trailers/year. Make that 2,500,000 or even 3,000,000 x $3,000/tractor-trailer = $9,000,000,000 or $9 billion. That would be 1.3% of the revenue amount. Is that an unreasonable cost of doing business?

If 1000 lives were saved (plus untold catastrophic, debilitating injuries prevented), that would be $9,000,000/life saved. The DOT sets the Value of a Saved Life (VSL) at $9.6 million.

Obviously, that amount includes retrofitting existing trailers which would not have to be repeated every year. But, even with this rough math calculations, I’m having a hard time seeing what is causing a panic.

Furthermore, is OOIDA helping their membership to look at the broad picture of how comprehensive underride protection can actually benefit the trucking industry? That includes the greatly decreased insurance risk when truck crashes lead to fewer fatalities.

We would encourage you to learn more about the trucking industry, including its incredible diversity, before continuing to promote S. 665. One-size-fits-all solutions simply don’t work.

I would encourage OOIDA, and others in the trucking industry, to thoroughly do their due diligence on the underride problem and solutions. Take it on as collaborative challenge to reach a mutually-beneficial goal: safer trucking. Take advantage of the upcoming opportunity to witness an underride crash and two successful side underride protective devices firsthand at the D.C. Underride Crash Test on March 26.

As a bonus, here are my responses to concerns expressed by the American Trucking Associations (ATA) about the STOP Underrides! Bill:

Question for the ATA: Is it necessary to choose EITHER crash avoidance OR occupant protection — not BOTH?

My knee-jerk reaction to the ATA Letter of Opposition to the STOP Underrides! Bill

Back-of-the-Envelope Math for Underride Protection Retrofit Cost/Trailer Equation

Senator Gillibrand Responds to Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Assn Concerns re: STOP Underrides! Bill

On December 19, 2017, shortly after the STOP Underrides! Bill was introduced, I called Mike Matousek, Director of Government Affairs for the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association (OOIDA). I told him about the bill and asked him if we could discuss any concerns they might have about the legislation. He agreed to look it over.

Despite the fact that I sent reams of information about the underride problem and solutions and tried to set up face to face meetings with OOIDA representatives, OOIDA proceeded to issue a letter of opposition to Senator Gillibrand and Senator Rubio on January 29:

OOIDA S 2219 Letter

On March 3, trucker advocates Allen and Donna Smith went through the OOIDA talking points on the bill one at a time on their Radio Talk Show (Jerry, Lois, and I were their guests for the show):

  1. Allen and Donna Smith, truck safety advocates for over ten years, have used their Ask the Trucker social media platform to raise awareness about the underride problem. Thank you, Allen & Donna!
  2. Ask the Trucker blogposts:
    Underride Guard Mandate: A Counterargument to Industry Opposition
    Unknown facts about underride crashes and prevention
  3. Podcast of Ask the Trucker BlogTalkRadio: Underride Protection Act of 2017- Truck RearGuards & SideGuards

On March 16, Senator Gillibrand responded to OOIDA with a letter addressing each of their concerns. Read it for yourself and see what you think is the truth of the matter:

Letter to OOIDA from Senator Gillibrand

 

Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association brochure of services

This OOIDA brochure describes their benefits and services. I picked it up at a truck stop while on a road trip. Note the truck driver insurance & minimum liability.

OOIDA brochure

My Crash Course on Underwriting for Trucking Minimum Liability Could Impact You

In case you did not know it, the minimum level of liability insurance, which trucking companies are required to have, is $750,000 and has not increased in over 35 years. It has not kept up with inflation as Congress intended when it originally authorized the Secretary of Transportation to set that limit.

“The Motor Carrier Act of 1935 first directed the establishment of Federal rules and regulations for interstate motor carrier operations that govern “security for the protection of the public.” Over time, both Congress and the Federal government have taken numerous actions to address the levels of financial responsibility, most recently with the recent enactment of MAP-21. The current minimum levels of financial responsibility for commercial motor carriers were established by Congressional legislation in the early 1980’s. Recently, there has been interest in determining whether the current mandated levels continue to accomplish these goals and whether victims of truck- and bus-related crashes are adequately compensated.” p. xi  http://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/sites/fmcsa.dot.gov/files/docs/Financial-Responsibility-Study.pdf

As one daughter of a truck crash victim has said, “That’s $750K for each incident, not each person injured or killed in a crash. So if several families or cars are involved all those injured and all the families of those killed must share the $750K if that is all the truck company has.”  http://trucksafety.org/dawn-kings-journey-2011/

In contrast, check out this DOT document which they prepared in order to determine the value of lost life and injury and its impact on rulemaking decisions:                                          VSL Guidance-2013-2 DOT value of life .

In the fall of 2014, the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA)  issued an advanced notice of proposed rulemaking  in order to study, among other things, the question of whether the minimum liability level should be increased in order to more adequately compensate for lost life and injury due to truck crashes.

  • The Federal Government has long required motor carriers to maintain certain levels of financial responsibility, either through insurance, a bond, or other financial security, as a means to protect the public in the event of a crash.  An April 2014 Report to Congress found that while catastrophic motor carrier crashes are rare, the costs for resulting severe and critical injuries can exceed $1 million; current insurance limits do not adequately cover these costs, which are primarily due to increases in medical expenses and other crash-related costs. – See more at: http://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/newsroom/fmcsa-seeks-comment-public-insurance-providers-motor-carriers-revising-minimum-levels#sthash.dQV1v0AQ.dpuf
  • From a study released in April 2014, FMCSA says that, “The legislative history of minimum insurance requirements for commercial motor vehicles (CMV) indicates that Congress recognized that crash costs would change over time and that DOT would periodically examine the levels and make adjustments as necessary. A variety of recent studies indicate that inflation has greatly increased medical claims costs and related expenses. In conclusion, FMCSA has determined that the current financial responsibility minimums are due for re-evaluation. The Agency has formed a rulemaking team to further evaluate the appropriate level of financial responsibility for the motor carrier industry and has placed this rulemaking among the Agency’s high priority rules. The FMCSA will continue to meet with the stakeholders, including impacted industries, safety advocacy groups, and private citizens, as it moves forward with developing a proposed rule.”  http://www.fmcsa.dot.gov/mission/policy/report-congress-examining-appropriateness-current-financial-responsibility-and

Unfortunately, despite the insistence of many that this increase is necessary, the trucking industry is lobbying against it–declaring it unnecessary–and, at present, has put a rider in the THUD appropriations bill now being voted on. If the bill passes with that rider intact, then FMCSA will no longer be funded to complete the rulemaking process which has already been authorized.

What is the truth in this matter–necessary or unnecessary? That is what I would like to know. And I think that truckers and lawmakers and the public need to know this as well. And that is why I set out on a quest recently to find the answer to that question.

The support for halting the rulemaking which is coming from the trucking industry includes the Independent Owner Operators, who in particular are being told that their premiums will skyrocket if the rule were to pass.  According to Jami Jones from OOIDA (Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association),

“An increase such as the one Cartwright is proposing would cripple small-business-truckers. Currently, the national average cost for a small-business trucker insuring one truck is about $5,000 per year.

It’s virtually impossible to project what the cost would be if the minimum liability requirement were increased more than 500 percent.

For starters many insurance carriers may quit offering insurance because of the increased amount of financial resources they would have to have in place to even write the policies. Secondly, there is no straight-line increase that can be drawn. But early estimates place annual premiums at $20,000 or more for a one-truck owner-operator for a $4.2 million liability policy.” – See more at: http://www.landlinemag.com/Story.aspx?StoryId=25702#.VXoxp_lViko

In contrast, check out this opinion on the potential premium:

https://annaleahmary.com/2015/06/the-future-of-trucking-who-pays-for-the-costs-of-safer-roads/ John Lannen, executive director of the Truck Safety Coalition, has shared background information with us which he has gathered from numerous sources, presentations, and conversations regarding the economics of additional insurance coverage for motor carriers.  It turns out that the first million dollars’ worth of  trucking insurance is the most expensive and each incremental amount is cheaper. . . . ” (For more details, go here: https://annaleahmary.com/2015/06/trucking-minimum-liability-insurance-trucker-wages-a-facebook-conversation/ )”

Additionally, I have been having online conversations with truckers and have not found any evidence to verify the validity of that $20,000 estimate. Many people in the industry pooh-pooh safety advocacy which they consider based merely on emotion. But do they hold themselves to the same standard and insist on FACTS?

I am certainly motivated strongly by emotions to be in this quest for safer roads for the long haul. But I hope that I am basing my statements and my advocacy on facts and logical reasoning. In fact, I am not content to accept at face value statements by the trucking industry which influence both those whom they represent and also lawmakers who make decisions on truck safety legislation. I am, therefore, concerned about decisions being made on matters which impact victims of truck crashes and which quite possibly may be impacted by misinformed fears.

Because I feel so strongly about getting to the bottom of this question, I have spent many hours this week trying to find out what the new premiums will actually be for truckers if the minimum liability level is eventually raised. In order to educate myself on this topic, I have spoken or emailed with:

  • Todd Spencer, Executive Vice President of OOIDA–the Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association (awaiting a response from him)
  • National Association of Insurance Commissioners (who explained to me that as liability limits go up, rates go down. He also told me that insurance companies are required by law to file their rate tables with the state and that I should be able to contact a state department of insurance and ask for that information. He said that the rate tables would list the options for liability limits and that each level would indicate a figure which would be a multiplier–to be multiplied by the trucker’s base rate in order to find out the new premium at higher levels. I have yet to get access to these tables.)
  • North Carolina Department of Insurance (still have to check with the Property and Casualty Division)
  • Numerous insurance agencies
  • Several truckers, including: https://annaleahmary.com/2015/06/trucking-minimum-liability-insurance-a-facebook-conversation-with-truckers-continues/

Many independent owner operators are concerned that they would bear the brunt of increases — being at a disadvantage to the larger self-insuring trucking companies. FMCSA’s rulemaking addresses this issue. http://www.landlinemag.com/Story.aspx?StoryID=28110#.VXozEPlViko

Along that line, please read this paper written by an independent owner operator:      Tilden Curl Paper on Trucker Insurance

Finally, I contacted FMCSA, to whom, on May 5, 2014, we originally presented our petition request for raising the minimum liability. At that time, they indicated that in order to get access to proprietary insurance information to determine estimated premiums they would have to initiate the rulemaking process–which they did in November 2014.

However, when I emailed FMCSA today to find out if they had gotten access to that proprietary information, they let me know that they did not yet have the information to estimate the increase in insurance premiums. In order to get that information, they have recently published a rulemaking entitled “Confidential Business Information,” which would “help encourage insurance companies to share some of their proprietary information” for use in the agency rulemaking process–without disclosing confidential information to the general public.

The evident lack of transparency really bothers me, especially with all of the rumors going around–rumors which are swaying decisions and actions that impact life & death matters.

Meanwhile, who pays the price for this issue being stuck in limbo? Some would claim that, “In the end, if minimum liability insurance is increased to $4.2 million, the only winners would be the trial lawyers and large motor carriers – with small-business trucking suffering an expensive, wildly burdensome and completely unnecessary mandate.” – See more at: http://www.landlinemag.com/Story.aspx?StoryId=25702#.VXo3XvlViko

Really? What about those who already bear the brunt of unexpected, unnecessary tragedy and untimely death? Aren’t they the ones that the insurance is intended to benefit?

 

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Trucking Minimum Liability Insurance; A facebook conversation with truckers continues

To follow my facebook conversation with some truckers, go here:  https://www.facebook.com/TruckersUnitedUSA/posts/1575533959380841

Feel free to jump in the conversation. I think that I will need to chew on this one for awhile and figure out where to go next with this.

Check out Tilden Curl’s (an independent owner-operator trucker) thoughts on Minimum Liability Insurance and see what you think:  Tilden Curl Paper on Trucker Insurance

46 Mary 10.41 am May 4 2013

Mary selfie at 10:41 a.m., May 4, 2013

Crash was at 1:58 p.m., May 4, 2013

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Mary’s braids, saved by a nurse