You’ll probably never think about truck accident causes in Connecticut until you’re dealing with an insurance company long after the accident. The moments immediately following any serious crash are often too scary to consider anything.
As you adjust to your surroundings, you may begin assessing your injuries and your need for emergency care. You may wonder about hospitalization, disabilities, lost wages, and costly medical bills. Determining fault, evaluating the causes and legal issues are complex tasks best left in the hands of a truck accident attorney. Before you talk to a commercial insurance investigator, you need a legal advocate who can protect your legal rights.
Truck Accidents Are Complex Events
Every truck accident is the final result of factors over which you have little control. Unfortunately, those factors may eventually affect you for a lifetime. As a motorist, these truck accident causes may seem clear and simple: The trucker ran a red light. They were driving too fast, or they lost control on a highway.
Identifying these negligent actions helps truck accident attorneys, insurance companies, and courts decide fault. Understanding the events preceding the accident helps everyone gain insight into what may have been going on before and during the crash. As a concerned truck accident attorney, we want to share what we know.
How Often Do Truck Accidents Occur?
You don’t hear about truck accidents everyday because they don’t occur as frequently as private passenger vehicle crashes. The National Highway Transportation Administration’s most recent annual Traffic Safety Facts Research Note documents 5,930,496 accidents nationwide. Large trucks were involved in 536,424 of those accidents. Sadly, truck accident numbers aren’t as positive as they seem.
What Happens When Truckers Crash?
Truck accidents occur less frequently than other types of vehicle accidents, but they do more harm. A large truck has the capacity to cause more damage and injuries than a private passenger vehicle. Large truck crashes produce a more forceful impact than smaller vehicles under the same circumstances. A truck’s mass allows it to damage multiple vehicles simultaneously, with smaller vehicle occupants frequently sustaining serious, catastrophic, or fatal injuries.
While truckers do more damage, NHTSA data confirms that truckers sustain far fewer fatal injuries than others involved in these crashes. The Large Trucks Traffic Safety Facts publication includes the following statistics baked on ten years of national truck crash data.
- Nationally, large trucks make up approximately five percent of all registered vehicles.
- They were involved in approximately 10 percent of all fatal traffic crashes and five percent of all injury and property-damage-only crashes.
- Fatal large truck accidents are likely to be multi-vehicle crashes. Fatal private passenger accidents typically involve a single vehicle.
- In the most recent single-year truck accident data, 536,424 large truck accidents resulted in 5,936 fatalities and 160,608 injuries.
- Of the 5,936 fatalities, large truck occupants sustained 18 percent of the fatal injuries. Seventy percent of the fatalities occurred in the other vehicle. Eleven percent involved non-occupant victims such as bicyclists, motorcyclists, or pedestrians.
Truck Accidents in Connecticut
NHTSA data shows similar annual results for truck accidents in Connecticut. When a crash occurs, truckers are less likely to sustain fatal injuries than others involved in the same crash. They often drive away with less severe injuries, leaving private passenger vehicle occupants, pedestrians, motorcyclists, and bicyclists to deal with fatal or catastrophic traumas.
Fatal Truck Accidents in Connecticut
- Total vehicles involved in fatal crashes statewide: 508
- Total large trucks involved in fatal crashes: 37
- Victim occupancy in fatal accidents:
- Truck occupant: 7
- Other vehicle occupants: 27
- Non-vehicle occupants: 4
About Large Trucks
When you see big shiny trucks rolling on the highway, you probably think of them as semis, tractor-trailers, or big rigs. It’s a bit more complicated than that. National transportation and safety agencies define these medium and heavy trucks as Large Trucks. Here are a few key facts about these massive vehicles.
- Large trucks have a gross vehicle weight rating greater than 10,000 pounds. GVWR is the total weight of the truck plus its load.
- Dump trucks, garbage trucks, and many other service trucks belong in the large truck category.
- Large Heavy trucks have a GVWR of 26,000 pounds or more. These are often the big rigs you see, passing you on the highway.
- In Connecticut, a large truck can weigh up to 80,000 pounds, depending on its number of axles.
- Florida’s maximum large truck GVWR is 147,000 pounds, higher than any other state.
Truckers don’t usually drive dump trucks, garbage trucks, and other service vehicles at interstate highway speeds. That’s where twenty-seven percent of fatal large truck accidents occur. You may also see them on non-interstate roadways, which is where 73 percent of fatal large truck crashes occur.
Truck Size Matters
When a large truck causes a fatal crash, it’s usually a heavy, large truck. This weight category includes semis with loaded trailers, flatbeds carrying heavy equipment, and other massive transport vehicles. Heavy trucks cause substantial damage because they have a GVWR of 26,000 pounds or more. In Connecticut, truckers can load their trailers and flatbeds up to a GVWR of 80,000 pounds, the maximum allowable weight.
Due to their size, weight, and maneuverability challenges, large commercial trucks pose a significant threat to other drivers. Truckers share the road with smaller vehicles, motorcycles, and pedestrians and they can become life-threatening when a collision occurs.
Safety features, such as seatbelts, harnesses, airbags, and child safety seats, provide minimal protection against these forceful impacts. This vulnerability heightens the potential for death and catastrophic injuries such as traumatic brain injuries and spinal cord damage.
Trucks VS Smaller Vehicles
When a large truck crashes into your vehicle, the differences in weight, mass, and speed enhance its potential for causing injuries and damage. Based on the most recent EPA Automotive Trends Report, the average private passenger vehicle weighs 4,303 pounds. Your SUV, pickup, light truck, van, or private passenger may be heavier than this norm. Still it’s no match for a 10,000 to 80,000 pound vehicle rolling out of control.
When a trucker drives a heavy large truck at low speeds, its weight and mass can still cause extreme damage, catastrophic physical trauma, and fatal injuries.
Truckers Are Highly-Trained and Skilled
Truckers are some of the most highly-skilled drivers on the road. Before they make their first trip, they must qualify to be a commercial trucker. They usually undergo rigorous formal training to learn compliance with local, state, and federal regulations. They must then pass state-administered knowledge and skill tests. Depending on their proposed transport duties, truckers must also master specialty knowledge.
- Connecticut truckers study a state-specific Commercial Driver License manual that complies with Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration guidelines.
- They pass knowledge and skills tests to meet the standards for the CDL class they require.
- Class A Combination Vehicles
- Class B Heavy Straight Vehicles
- Class C Small Vehicles: GVWR less than 26,000 pounds
- If a trucker wants to transport people, hazardous materials, tankers, or other specialized cargoes, they must qualify for a specific license endorsement.
Of course, you ask the question: If truckers are so skillful and well-trained, why do they still cause accidents?
What Are Common Truck Accident Causes?
Truckers train and practice their skills over thousands of miles, so you expect them to drive accordingly. As they are also human, they often exhibit the same Risky Driving Behaviors the NHTSA cites as causing fatal private passenger accidents every day.
Drinking and Driving
Federal regulations and Connecticut statutes set .04 grams per deciliter as the legal BAC for commercial drivers. In the three percent of fatal truck accidents where alcohol impairment was a factor, the involved truckers had blood alcohol concentrations of .08 g/dL or higher.
While no trucker should drive such a massive vehicle after drinking, the percentage of fatal accidents involving alcohol impairment is far lower for truckers than for private passenger vehicle drivers:
- Motorcycles: 28% were alcohol impaired.
- Private passenger cars: 25% were alcohol impaired.
- Light trucks: 21% were alcohol impaired.
It’s not coincidental that truckers have low alcohol impairment rates. When a trucker drives for a transport company, Title 49, Federal Transportation statutes…§382, Controlled Substance and Alcohol Use Testing, requires management to minimize risks associated with their truckers’ drug and alcohol use. With each trucker/employee, a company accepts these responsibilities:
- Run a substance abuse inquiry through the FMCSA’s Drug and Alcohol Clearinghouse
- Conduct random alcohol and substance testing
- Take steps to monitor employees and keep impaired truckers off the road.
Driving Under The Influence of Drugs
The US Department of Transportation/FMSCA’s most recent, Large Truck and Bus Crash Facts reports that of the large truck drivers involved in fatal crashes, six percent tested positive for at least one drug.
These results are not as comprehensive as they could be. While investigating truck accidents, law enforcement officers tested only 62 percent of the drivers. As drug testing is conditional after a crash, they test only if evidence suggests that drugs are a factor.
The National Transportation Safety Board, which conducts high profile accident investigations, often expresses concern over rising alcohol and drug use. The agency has also formalized its objections to the Drug Enforcement Administration’s proposed rule to change marijuana from a Schedule 1 to a Schedule 3 drug. They’re concerned that regulatory changes might prevent drug testing for pilots, truckers and others in safety-sensitive positions.
While most states have laws preventing driving while impaired, they have no measure for determining degrees of drug impairment. Also drivers have access to many drugs for which they have no standardized tests to indicate criminal actions. .
Speeding
NHTSA lists speeding as a risky driving behavior as it’s a factor in 29% of all fatal accidents. As in most vehicle crashes, speeding doesn’t necessarily indicate that a trucker isn’t driving within a statutory limit. Of the fatal accidents where speed is a factor, truckers were traveling at speeds ranging from 25 to 85 miles per hour.
While these truckers may have been driving within designated speed limits, they should also have let the road’s surface dictate their speed. This is an issue because a truck’s weight and mass reduces a trucker’s ability to stop or maneuver quickly. Excessive speed is particularly problematic on wet, icy, or snow-filled roads.
To ensure proper stopping distances, a trucker must consider:
- Perception distance: The distance a truck travels after the trucker recognizes a hazard. Visibility, alertness, and other factors can affect perception.
- Reaction distance: How far a truck continues to move before the trucker hits the brakes. At 55 miles per hour, the average reaction time allows a truck to travel approximately 61 feet before taking action.
- Braking distance: This is the distance a vehicle travels on dry pavement with good brakes. At 55 mph, a complete stop requires approximately 216 feet minimum stopping distance.
- Total stopping distance: The total minimum distance a truck travels until the driver can perceive a hazard, react, and bring the truck to a complete stop.
All of these factors shift when a trucker is traveling at a higher speed.
Distracted Driving
Most states have laws banning personal digital device use while driving, yet motorists continue their multitasking habits while driving. Federal regulations restrict truckers from texting while driving but NTSB suggests that regulations should ban all drivers from using any digital device.
Law enforcement agencies are becoming more savvy about identifying crashes caused by distracted driving. They recognize that it’s been a longstanding issue. Cell phones and other digital devices merely added to the existing problem.
Truck accident fact sheets reflect a time-delay in data analysis, so they haven’t systematically captured distracted driving as an accident cause. As law enforcement officers have learned to identify distracted driving signs–a sober driver behaves as though alcohol or drug impaired–they may document it as an accident cause more frequently.
Large Truck and Bus Crash Facts confirms 278 distraction related fatal truck crashes. Here are just a few of the factors listed.
- Distracted by Outside Person, Object, or Event
- Talking or Listening to Cell Phone
- Using or Reaching For Device/Object Brought Into Vehicle
- Eating or Drinking
- Lost In Thought/Daydreaming
- Adjusting Audio and/or Climate Controls
- Distracted By Other Occupant(s)
- Distraction/Careless
- Looked But Did Not See
- Smoking Related
Drowsy Driving
Drowsy driving is another risky driving behavior and a preventable cause of fatal accidents. NHTSA statistics cite it as a causative factor in 693 traffic vehicle fatalities nationwide. Truckers have admitted that falling asleep or driving while fatigued caused 63 truck accident fatalities. While these numbers seem small when compared to other accident statistics, any preventable fatality should be unacceptable.
As with other accident causes, NHTSA admits that drowsy driving is probably an underreported problem. When an accident occurs, law enforcement officers have difficulty proving drowsy driving was an issue. A driver doesn’t usually display noticeable signs of drowsiness after a crash occurs.
Reasons a Trucker Drives Drowsy
- Sleep: lack of sleep or poor sleep quality
- Medical issues
- Personal problems
- Delivery challenges: A trucker must work non-stop to meet a delivery deadline.
- Medication side effects
- Health issues
Health Issues
As the pool of long-term truck drivers ages out of the workforce, their health issues sometimes contribute to accidents. Overweight truckers may experience obstructive sleep apnea, a condition that often disrupts their sleep cycle. If the condition persists and remains untreated, it can cause inadequate sleep, fatigue, and drowsy driving. Apnea and other conditions may interfere with driving and sometimes cause accidents.
Cargo Securement
Subcontractors or shippers usually complete the cargo securement process. If a load shifts and causes a jackknife, falls onto a car, or causes the trailer to overturn, the trucker usually deals with the consequences. The FCMSA’s Securement Rules set standards for tiedowns, anchor points, headerboards and other load safety specifications.
Load securement is a road safety issue. Ultimately, that makes it the trucker’s responsibility. Improperly loaded or secured cargo may shift during acceleration, stopping, turns, or tight maneuvers. If load shifts, throwing the truck off balance, it can cause truck accidents.
Truck Accident Causation Gets Even More Complicated
When the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Agency conducted its large truck accident causation study, investigators examined data from 963 crashes. They also talked to drivers and inspected 24 sites in 17 States. Based on their findings, they published a Large Truck Crash Causation Study.
They have since updated and modified the original findings. Still, the report explains concepts that will likely remain evergreen until trucks become fully autonomous or manufacturers develop advanced technologies that prevent accidents altogether.
Defining Causation
The FMCSA study defines causation as “…the factors that are most likely to increase the risk that large trucks will be involved in serious crashes…” These factors often include elements that take place hours, days, or months before a crash. They include:
- Driver training and experience,
- Vehicle design and manufacture
- Highway condition and traffic signaling,
- Weather conditions
- Driver decisions
- Vehicle conditions
Critical Events and Critical Reasons
Investigators identified consistencies and what they determined to be the two primary components of every truck accident: Critical Events and Critical Reasons.
Critical Events
Critical events are documenting initiating acts. They are based on evidence and sometimes–but not always–lead to a crash. Large truck accidents often occur due to these types of critical events:
- A lane of travel ends, forcing the trucker to enter another lane or run off the road. This occurred in 32 percent of the crashes studied.
- A trucker loses control due to speed, road conditions, shifts in cargo, vehicle system failure, etc. This occurred in 29 percent of the accidents studies.
- Colliding with a vehicle’s rear end while it’s in the trucker’s lane.
Critical Reasons
Human factors often contribute to or worsen a critical event. These actions may occur before or during the accident. They often make the difference that turns a critical event into a catastrophic accident.
- Failure to Perform: A trucker doesn’t always take the timely action that could prevent a critical event from becoming an accident. This failure may involve falling asleep at the wheel, alcohol use, health issues, or other reasons.
- Recognition Failure: Distraction, inattention, or some other reason prevented the driver from seeing what was happening.
- Poor Decision-Making: The trucker misjudged another vehicle’s speed, followed too closely, or failed to take appropriate defensive driving actions.
- Inappropriate Performance: When a driver panics, overcompensates, overreacts, or exercises poor judgment, they can turn a critical event into a life-threatening accident.
Associated Factors
The study also documented associated factors, conditions that existed within the accident timeframe. FMCSA found hundreds of associated factors. Their investigators listed these top 10 based on the number of times they were present during the accidents studied.
- Interruption of the traffic flow
- Unfamiliarity with roadway
- Inadequate surveillance
- Driving too fast for conditions
- Illegal maneuver
- Inattention
- Fatigue
- Illness
- False assumption of other road user’s actions
- Distraction by object or person inside the vehicle
While drivers often associated these factors with accidents, the study concluded that they may or may not have been contributing factors
Truck Accidents Are Usually Complicated
After reviewing this information, you shouldn’t expect to become an expert on truck accident causes in Connecticut. We hope this provides at least some degree of familiarity as to how complex truck accident causation issues can be. What does it all mean?
The short answer: If a trucker injured you in a car accident, find a truck accident attorney as soon as possible. Your attorney can manage the complex details while you take time to heal.