
The Trucker
"I do not hate truckers. I think the majority of truck drivers are good hard working people. It is the few companies in the industry that push profits over safety, risking the trucker, other people on the road and their families. Wrongdoers should answer for the preventable injuries and deaths." ~ Howard Spiva
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Perhaps
television shows and movies have created this stereotype.
Some examples that
come to mind are the strong and tough, arm-wrestling, Sylvester Stallone, who
played Hawk, in Over the Top or the fun loving Burt Reynolds in the three Smokey
and the Bandit movies. Other perceived characteristics of truckers are highly
skilled and courageous and in many shows and movies they are heroes. This is
especially true in some of the popular 1970's trucking, "cb-radio" movies such
as Convoy, Movin On, 18 Wheels of Justice, , White Line Fever, Breaker Breaker,
Steel Cowboy, The Great Smokey Roadblock, BJ and the Bear, and many others.
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Yes,
America loves the hard working, strong, blue collar, family
man,
representing the work ethic of our country. The American hero is just
struggling to put food on the table. He is a highly skilled, physically fit,
professional, who can navigator the roads with endurance, and confidence. This
almost mythical worker, is often times seen as a great husband and father
touring the country in his state-of-the-art equipped truck with beautiful
polished aluminum wheels.
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THE
TRUTH ABOUT THE INDUSTRY
True, there are a few major trucking and shipping
companies that are examples of professionalism. But most are not like Coca Cola and the industry leader, JJ Keller & Associates. The majority of
trucking companies are small volume operators. There are probably no more or no
less percentages of incompetent truckers than folks who work in other
industries.
- The difference is truckers, like pilots, are trusted as
"professionals" and their decisions and actions can mean life and death.
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Many
hundreds of trucking companies across America
consist only of small time
operations that happen to own a tractor-trailer. These are often short-sighted,
hand-to-mouth operators providing the barest safety policies or ethics; other
than to get a delivery done for the least cost and highest profit. An even
closer look at the the trucking industry and virtually any truck
wreck, will reveal rampant drug use, "deferred" truck maintenance, mechanical
problems, excessive driving hours, lack of sleep, sketchy qualifications and
doubtful ethics. Safety, training and vehicle maintenance often take a back seat
to company profits. Sadly, many companies encourage speeding and driving long
hours by the manner in which it pays its drivers. Drivers are motivated by
"dollars per mile", and there are slogans encouraging such behavior like "on
time every time". Much like the pizza deliveries of 1980s when speeding drivers
seriously injured and killed people trying tor the "30 minutes or free".
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GEORGIA
ENFORCEMENT DIVISION
The Department of Motor Vehicle Safety was dissolved in
2005 by Georgia Governor Sonny Purdue and all enforcement for compliance, to
Motor Carrier Regulations and laws, was moved to the Motor Carrier Compliance
Division of the Georgia Department of Public Safety. This enforcement division
inspects approximately 90,000 trucks per year. Out of those inspected,
approximately 38% of the trucks are "out of service compliance" (unsafe) and 17%
of the drivers are "out of compliance". The most common reason for the trucks
being cited is for problems with the brakes and tires. For drivers, the
prominent problems are too many hours driving, no proof in log books and
alcohol/drugs in their system. The truth is clear that many of these giant
trucks are poorly maintained and often are loaded far beyond their 80,000 pound
capacity. Our law firm's experience has been that many drivers have poor driving
histories with multiple violations and wrecks.
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Another
problem is "out of compliance" medical certificates on the driver.
Many
false certificates are found to be purchased on-line and often forged. A truck
driver with bad health is similar to an airline pilot who doesn't pass his
physical, they are dangerous. Our office handle a case when an insulin dependent
diabetic driver, was driving a log truck, after having most of his right foot
amputated. His "foot" kept slipping off the gas pedal. This resulted in our
client coming over a rise on a dark expressway only to have a log pierce his
vehicle's grill, the dash and then his own mid section. He lived, but the
logging company had inadequate liability insurance available for his medical
treatment, lost income and his lifelong losses.
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OVER
LOADED AND CHEAP
The Georgia "weigh stations", that enforce size and weight
limits, screen 11.5 million trucks per year. In Georgia, approximately 60,000
trucks are found to be "over weight" each year. These "over loaded" trucks costs
Georgia citizens money for the damage to our highways, and they also create
serious safety risks on our roads. Nationwide the number of citations issued is
closer to 850,000. The efforts to deter overloaded trucks are "suspect" when
closely examined. Previously fines in Georgia, before 2005, were often less than
1/8 of one cent per "over weight pound". Currently fines are based on is a
sliding scale, depending on how overweight a truck is, however, the average fine
is 5 cents per pound and the maximum total fine is only $99.00!
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So
why aren't the laws tougher?
It's not because lawmakers are unaware of the
dangers of overloaded trucks. They know. It is not because they don't know that
the penalties for breaking the law are light. The truth is that there is little
political will to make the consequences harsher. Resistance to increased fines
doesn't just come from the trucking industry, but also from businesses that
depend on trucks to ship their goods to customers. We all should ask lawmakers
to raise fines to both increase revenues for the state and to make our roads a
little safer. Enforcement officials say the "overweight" policing are like a
cat-and-mouse game. The Motor Carrier Compliance Division tries to catch the
truckers. The truckers try to avoid the fines. But in this game, the cats don't
have much in the way of fangs or claws. Drivers of overweight vehicles can
afford not to be too worried, because the law is stacked in their favor. Fines
nationwide are small. Inspectors are stretched too thin and the trucking
industry is
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SIZE
MATTERS
Motorists near those overweight trucks are at a greater risk because
overweight trucks are more prone to accidents. Weight does matter. Studies show
that overweight trucks are more likely to be in accidents. They also roll over
more easily and need more time and distance to stop. A truck weighing 120,000
pounds, needs 50 percent more distance and time to stop than a truck weighing
the legal 80,000 pounds. Whether a truck has that extra space and time could
make the difference between a fender bender and someone dying.
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ROLLING
DEATH
Whether they are overweight or not, the damage that trucks do on the
nation's roads is well-documented. One out of eight traffic fatalities in 2005
was the result of a collision involving a truck, according to the National
Center for Statistics and Analysis. During 2005 alone, 5,212 people died in
truck-related accidents. That is almost twice the number of people who died in
the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. Just one year of truck related deaths
(over 5000), exceed the deaths in the five years of the current war
(approximately 4200). In Georgia, many wrecks involve these big rigs and Georgia
ranks among the top five states in the nation in the number of fatalities due to
crashes of large trucks.
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EXEMPTIONS
Even
the regulations and rules intended to make trucking safe and make companies
carry minimum insurance, are subject to political influence. This become clear
in states such as Georgia that have "exemptions" to the rules for trucks
involved in the transportation of Agricultural products and Forest products
(logging trucks). The results are many dangerous trucks operating along the
highways and back roads of Georgia that are dangerous and inadequately insured.
Many trailers have no insurance. Inadequate liability insurance leaves the
medical expenses of injured people to the Georgia taxpayers.
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RAPID
RESPONSE TEAMS
The insurance companies for trucking companies have "rapid
response teams". They often are at the scene even before emergency responders.
Many attorneys have alleged at trucking seminars, that they have had cases where
insurers hired investigators and experts, who have removed log books (both
sets), tampered with GPS and data recorders (black boxes), taken photographs,
and interviewed witnesses within minutes of a wreck. Folks hired by the
insurance company document evidence and claim "work product" protections. This
information, if discovered, could document negligent conduct by the trucker and
their employer. This practice would suggest the similar need for someone
involved in a trucking accident or their family to contact legal representation
immediately.
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MORE
BAD NEWS ~ UNDER INSURED
In Georgia, a trucking company involved in
intra-state commerce (only within Georgia) is only required to keep $100,000.00
in liability insurance! For interstate (multistate) travel the requirement is
$750,000.00 in liability insurance. Some companies, due to their "contract"
requirements with their customers, carry $1,000,000.00 in liability insurance.
Unfortunately, these huge trucks cause so much damage and destruction in a
wreck, even one million dollars is far insufficient to cover the actual damages.
Our law firm has experienced many instances where such required insurance limits
have fallen short. One example is where a truck caused over $200,000.00 in
damages to the other vehicles. This property damage money had to be ducted from
the aggravated or total limits, reducing the coverage available to the medical
bills and lost wages of the injured people.
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LONG
LINE FOR SHORT INSURANCE
If most truckers being underinsured is not bad
enough, often times the worker's compensation insurance carrier, the Group
Health carrier, Medicaid, Medicare, Social Security, Tri Care, Champus, and any
med-pay carriers are all in line with their hands out asking for a share of the
proceeds through off-sets, reimbursement and subrogation (paid back). A
collision involves the law of physics, when a car and a truck meet, the car
losses. A typical locomotive weighs about 300,000 pounds. Many over loaded
trucks reach near half that weight. A collision that ends in multiple injuries
and fatalities is not only preventable, but sadly the trucking company is often
inadequately insured.
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ALL
WRECKS ARE NOT EQUAL
Anyone who assumes that a large semi-truck wreck is
just a bigger car wreck is dangerously naive. Investigation, discovery,
technology and law involved in the crashes of large commercial trucks are
substantially different from other motor vehicle accident cases. You and the
lawyer that you hire must know the difference to prevent the insurer from short
changing you or your family in a recovery for injuries and damages associated
with and eighteen-wheeled collision.
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THE
PURPOSE OF A LAWSUIT
- The purpose of a lawsuit is to make the at fault party,
who is responsible for an injury or damages, "financially accountable" and not
put the burden or costs on the family or the tax payer.
- If you have an important
decision, choose well.
- Make it a great day!
- Howard Spiva
- Howard@spivalaw.com
(email)
- www.Spivalaw.com (main web page)
- (912) 920-2000
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