Change Is Hard

…but change is certain.

Disclaimer: This one's about trucks. And hope

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Do you remember hearing about a horrific crash out in Oklahoma a year ago June?  Ten people were killed when a semi driver didn’t notice that traffic had stopped.  I wrote about it then in a blog called “It’s not all about Michael” because the news that day was all about Michael Jackson’s death.  I remember being upset that one celebrity death was overshadowing the deaths of so many innocents.

Well, the NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board) has made a determination about the cause of that crash.  Bet you can guess.  Here’s a bit of their findings:

“The National Transportation Safety Board today determined

that the June 2009 fatal multi vehicle collision involving a

2008 Volvo truck-tractor semitrailer and a traffic queue

near Miami, Oklahoma, was caused by the truck driver’s

fatigue stemming from his acute sleep loss, circadian

disruption associated with his shift work schedule, and mild

sleep apnea. The 76-year-old driver failed to react to

slowing and stopped traffic ahead by applying brakes or

performing any evasive maneuvers to avoid colliding with the

traffic queue.”

“Ten passenger vehicle occupants died, 5 received minor-to-

serious injuries, and the driver of the truck combination

unit was seriously injured.”

I’ll spare you the description of how these people died.  Whatever we imagine is probably not as bad as it actually was.  I was disheartened to read the report this morning that confirmed my suspicion that this crash was almost exactly like the one that killed my dad.  It just seems as though the death continues and no one takes notice.

I was going to write this blog entry about my outrage over an issue that I feel is at the center of the fatigued driving problem – the lack of good and honest record keeping on the number of hours a driver drives – which could be solved with the mandate of Electronic On Board Recorders (EOBRs.).  EOBRs would keep the drivers, and their management honest, would allow drivers to rest when they should, and would monitor the bad drivers and companies in order to get them off our roads faster.  I was going to write about how the NTSB has been advising that EOBRs be mandated on all commercial trucks for almost thirty years but no one was listening.  I was going to write with passion about the thousands of people that die every year, the hundreds of thousands that are injured yearly and how EOBRs would be a relatively inexpensive way to lower those numbers.

I was all fired up.

And I came home to an email from the Executive Director of Truck Safety Coalition that told me two Senators introduced today a bill on the Senate floor to mandate EOBRs on all commercial trucks.  Really.  I had to read it twice to believe it.  And I’m having trouble breathing right now I’m so excited.

We don’t have a bill number yet.  But when we do, and hopefully we’ll have it soon, I’m going to find out the best way for us to make it clear to our Senators that we want them to support this bill.  If any of you want the text from Senator Pryor’s (D-AR) let me know and I’ll forward the email.  The other sponsor is Senator Alexander (R-TN).  I’m excited by everything about this; that it’s in the Senate, not the House, that it’s bipartisan, that someone gets it and is willing to do something.

I know that time is short with this legislative session.  I know it could die on the Senate floor.  I know we’re still a long way from making this law.  And I know that every day we wait 13 or 14 people will die.

Let’s not wait anymore.  Let’s get this bill passed.  Truck companies are behind it.  The NTSB is behind it.  Safety groups are behind it.   There’s no reason we can’t get this bill passed into law.  It’s worth the effort.  Because each of us is worth the effort.

Safety is  not partisan, not religious, not sexist, not elitist.  Safety just is.

Let’s not waste this opportunity.  Dad’s watching.

Author: dawnkinster

I'm a long time banker having worked in banks since the age of 17. I took a break when I turned 50 and went back to school. I graduated right when the economy took a turn for the worst and after a year of library work found myself unemployed. I was lucky that my previous bank employer wanted me back. So here I am again, a long time banker. Change is hard.

16 thoughts on “Disclaimer: This one's about trucks. And hope

  1. We’ll all hope that the bill passes, and soon. And that the timeline for having this done is reasonably and not extravagantly long.

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  2. Hope the bill passes it is so scary esp because I live on huge truck routes as so many of us do…..then you think about some states where they allow triple trailers, it is scary when one sleepy driver can affect so many lives…..in such a profound way.

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  3. Wow, that’s great progress! Hope it passes, too.

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  4. Dawn,
    Please post the bill number when you get it. I will send letters to my congress people.

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  5. That is great progress – finally! I sure hope the bill passes!

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  6. That would be wonderful if they got that passed. I saw this sign on a truck a few weeks ago. I can remember who was behind the sign. But its said, “Its about getting home to families”. I was going to send you a note but I forgot. Dinaa

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  7. Diana, hmmm…wonder who sponsored the sign? You could take it a number of ways. You could say it’s a safety thing…getting EVERYONE home safe to their families…but the reason my Dad was killed was because the driver stretched his hours so he could get home for Christmas…sad.

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  8. That would be great if this bill passed, thank you for writing about this in your post.

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  9. Dawn, please forward the email to me. It just hit me–after reading your blog for a couple of years now–my dad was a trucker for several years (he left on a haul the day before I was born), as was husband #2. As far as I know they were never involved in any accidents. I want to do something to honor my dad’s memory as well, and will write to my congresspeople regarding this new bill.

    Cheryl

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  10. Congratulations, Dawn……I’ll be keeping in touch to see how things progress. What a great tribute to your father.

    Sincerely,
    Julie

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  11. We, too will stand behind you and send letters to our congress-people!

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  12. I remember how it seemed like a nightmare — what we went through. How I thought the hurt just hurt so bad I wouldn’t want anybody else to go through it. How I wished I could just wiggle my nose, and let magic happen and stop that hurt from ever happening again. But I can’t , and the hurt keeps on happening. Too many families going through such pain. 😦

    I need to find my senator’s phone number(s) when I stop crying.

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  13. Cheryl, email me at dawnkinster@gmail.com and then I can forward you the words of Senator Pryor’s remarks to the Senate.

    Everyone else – as soon as we have a bill number I’ll let you know what it is and what you can say to your Senators to get them behind this bill!

    Thanks for all your support!

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  14. Wonderful news! Let us know when it’s up for a vote or should we just contact our senators now? I presume we could count on Levin and Stabenow as supporters?

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    • No don’t contact your senator now…there’s some wording in the bill that makes the data the EORB’s collect illegal to use in a civil case against the companies. Sigh. Found out about THAT part tonight. So of COURSE the truck companies are backing this bill. I’ll let you know what happens next.

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  15. Pingback: Sometimes you should look a gift horse in the mouth | Dawn King

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