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With America’s thriving oil and natural gas industries and our need for fuel, it is no wonder tanker trucks fill our highways and roads. Let’s be clear, that’s usually a good thing. Lots of tanker trucks on the road can signal lots of jobs and a healthy economy. Sometimes, however, tanker trucks cause catastrophes. Every year, tanker truck explosions cause deaths, injuries, and destruction on roads in all states. Many more commercial vehicle accidents involving tanker trucks—even when their cargo does not explode—put lives in danger. As important as tanker tracks are to the local economy, they are equally deadly. So, I thought I might spend some time in this blog post talking to you about HOW THESE CATASTROPHIC ACCIDENTS HAPPEN, the TOLL THEY TAKE ON INNOCENT VICTIMS, and WHAT YOU CAN DO if a tanker truck accident devastates your life or the life of a loved one.
According to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA), tanker truck accidents account for between 5 percent and 10 percent of truck-involved accidents on U.S. roads every year that result in deaths, injuries, or property damage. How many accidents is that? Well, according to the FMCSA, IT’S A LOT. In the last full year for which statistics were available when this blog went to press), there were 9,610 tanker truck accidents on American roads. 372 of those were fatal, 3,505 involved injuries, and 5,733 were “tow-away” accidents with no reported deaths or injuries (which might not necessarily mean no one got hurt in them, by the way—just that nobody reported injuries).
Well, let me tell you. Tanker truck accidents are dangerous because they combine all the dangers of your typical tractor trailer accident with the added factor of potentially explosive or toxic cargo. Here’s what I mean.
Most tanker trucks are just tractor trailer rigs with a special trailer designed to carry liquid or gaseous cargo. Leaving that cargo aside for a moment, that means tanker trucks pose all the typical dangers of big rigs. For example:
Tanker trucks pose an additional danger to anyone sharing the road with them, however, because they often (but not always) carry cargo that could EXPLODE if ignited or release TOXIC FUMES if allowed to escape their container. Even non-toxic, non-flammable cargo can cause damage and injuries if released onto a roadway. Because of the EXTREME danger involved in transporting hazardous cargo, tanker truck drivers need to have special “endorsements” on their drivers’ licenses that they obtain by doing additional training in how to transport hazardous materials safely. However, even that extra training is no guarantee that a tanker truck driver will operate his rig with appropriate caution and care. Like any long-haul truck drivers, tanker truck drivers work under difficult conditions. They drive long hours under tight deadlines. THEY SPEED. THEY GET DISTRACTED. They suffer from fatigue. They resort to over-the-counter and (sometimes) illegal stimulants to keep them awake and alert on the road. I could go on-and-on, but you get the idea. IN THEORY, we should be able to count on tanker truck drivers to be the most responsible and careful truck drivers on the road. IN PRACTICE, that is not always the case. Tanker truck drivers are human, and they make deadly mistakes.
Anyone with the misfortune to get into an accident with a tanker truck faces death and potentially catastrophic injury. BUT THAT IS NOT ALL. Because of the potentially toxic nature of their cargo, tanker trucks put EVERYONE in their vicinity at risk in an accident. You don’t even need to be directly involved in a tanker truck accident to be harmed by one.
Of course, a collision with a tanker truck spells EXTREME danger for occupants of any vehicle involved. Tanker trucks that collide with smaller vehicles inflict MASSIVE damage, no matter how the accident occurs. Death, spinal cord injuries, traumatic brain injuries, traumatic amputations, and crushed limbs are all common when a tanker truck runs into, or over, a smaller vehicle, or when the smaller vehicle rear-ends, or rides under, the tanker truck. Of course, if the tanker truck explodes or releases toxic cargo in a collision, occupants of smaller vehicles could suffer severe burns or internal injuries from exposure to toxins.
Even if a tanker truck does not collide with another vehicle, an accident involving a tanker still puts other road users at TREMENDOUS RISK. For example:
To keep yourself and your loved ones safe from an accident involving a tanker truck (or, really, any kind of large truck), take some simple preventive measures.
If you cannot see the trucker in his rear-view mirror, then odds are he cannot see you. Also, truckers cannot see you at all if you drive too close to their front or rear bumpers. Unless the trucker has fancy high-tech cameras on his bumpers, he is effectively BLIND to vehicles in his front and rear “no zones.“ Also, do not linger in the lane next to a tanker truck. On the highway, pass a truck as quickly as possible. If you cannot pass safely, then at a bare minimum stay where you can see the trucker in his mirrors. On a city street, NEVER sit in a traffic lane next to a tanker truck that is about to turn at an intersection. The trucker cannot see you and you run an EXTREME risk of being run over or crowded off the road. Hang back and let the trucker make the turn with plenty of room to spare.
Some of the most DEVASTATING and DESTRUCTIVE tanker truck accidents across the nation happen when trains collide with tanker trucks at railroad crossings, and when tanker trucks do not have enough distance to stop. Those CATASTROPHES illustrate how important it is to give tanker trucks the room they need to maneuver safely. It’s not just other road users, but EVERYONE on and near a road who faces EXTREME DANGER in a tanker truck accident. So, if you see a tanker truck getting bottled up, do your part and try to give the truck space.
Everyone on the road owes it to their fellow motorists and citizens to KEEP AN EYE OUT for leaks and spills from tanker trucks. Tanker truck drivers might not even realize they are leaking cargo. Alert the driver immediately or pull over to call 911, and then move as far away as possible to keep yourself and your loved ones safe.
If the WORST happens and a tanker truck accident injures you or a loved one, do you know the steps to take to protect your wellbeing and legal rights? Here’s what I usually recommend to ANYONE who faces a CATASTROPHE involving a tanker truck.
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