MEMORIAL DAY WEEKEND: SHARE THE ROAD TO AVOID ACCIDENTS AND DON'T FORGET THE VETS!
From: New York attorney Gary E. Rosenberg (personal injury and accident attorney and lawyer; serving Brooklyn Queens1Bronx; Queens Accident Lawyer)
When big rigs and cars collide in an accident, the laws of physics determine the outcome. Most often, the passenger car bears the brunt of the damage. The Insurance Information Network of California, the California Highway Patrol and the California Trucking Association have joined forces to focus attention on truck and passenger vehicle driver safety this Memorial Day Holiday weekend. In a demonstration, expert drivers highlighted the dangers of big rig blind spots and their physical stopping distance, which is greater than that of a passenger car. CHP officers reinforced the need for passenger car drivers to understand how to safely share the road with big trucks when traveling over the holiday weekend. Trucks often weigh 20-to-30 times more than a passenger car and have a harder time maneuvering around an emergency situation. An accident can have catastrophic results.
The Insurance Institute for Highway Safety estimates that 4,602 people died in truck collision accidents in 2007. Of these deaths, 16 percent were truck occupants and 70 percent were occupants of cars and other passenger vehicles. The California Highway Patrol estimates that more than half of the 7,262 collision accidents involving big rigs last year were caused by passenger vehicle drivers.
"Sharing the road with big rigs requires patience, and motorists need to recognize and avoid trucks' blind spots," said Candysse Miller, executive director of the Insurance Information Network of California. "Truckers in California maintain the highest standards of safety and need the help of passenger drivers to keep the roads safe," added CTA Chairman Bob Ramorino. "The number of trucks using the California highway system will inevitably increase over the coming years," said Deputy Commissioner Skip Carter. "For that reason, the CHP is working to create public awareness about driving around commercial trucks; and thus, minimizing truck-involved collisions and fatalities."
The CHP urges motorists to understand these basics of sharing the road with big rigs this holiday weekend:
• Allow plenty of room when changing lanes in front of a truck; • Pass trucks quickly and don't linger beside a truck;
• Pass a truck on the left, not on the right, because the truck's blind spot on the right runs the length of the trailer and extends out three lanes.
• Allow a lot of room around trucks. Try to leave a 10-car length gap when in front of a truck and 20-25 car lengths when behind a truck.
• Check a truck's mirrors. If you are following a truck and you cannot see the driver's face in the truck's side mirrors, the truck driver cannot see you.
• Allow trucks adequate space to maneuver. Trucks make wide turns at intersections and require additional lanes to turn.
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