NHTSA: Let’s control truck speed through electronic governors

Do you like scary rides?

Here’s an absolutely free one provided many millions of times each day to people across Southern California and the rest of the state: being a driver or passenger in a moderately sized car and having a 40-ton 18-wheel commercial truck whiz by you at 70 miles per hour.

Those things are big, indeed, and we know that all our readers readily appreciate the damage they can do when they are involved in accidents with other vehicles.

The occupants of those “other vehicles” invariably lose. In a best-case scenario, no lives are lost and property damage is minimal. Unfortunately, though, and in most instances, the consequences of a car-truck collision are flatly dire.

Safety regulators well appreciate, of course, the outsized dimensions and singular safety considerations inherent with vehicles like tractor trailers and other super-sized cargo carriers.

One specific concern that was recently expressed by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration relates to the dangerous nexus existing between high speed and tire blowouts.

In a nutshell: Evidence shows that the risks of a tire blowing out on a big rig correspond closely to the speed that the vehicle is being driven; the faster the rig is going, the higher the risk of a failing tire and resulting accident.

The NHTSA has a specific response to that problem that it is pushing as a national mandate affecting all commercial trucks, namely this: If the agency has its way, all such vehicles must soon have an electronic speed-limiting device installed that will top off their speed at 70 miles per hour.

Advocates will find that a salutary measure for every state, although the impact will likely be more acutely appreciated in some areas. California state law already has a 70-mph maximum (for rural freeways). Texas, on the other hand, allows truckers to travel as fast as 85 miles per hour in some areas.

Still, it is far from a secret that some truckers in California travel unlawfully fast. A speed governor would eliminate that behavior.

And, concomitantly, it would make driving on state roadways just a bit less exciting for many drivers of passenger vehicles, which is exactly the way they might logically want their driving experience to be.

Source: Yahoo! Finance, “Safety chief wants to cap big rig speeds to fix tire problem,” Meghan Barr and Tom Krisher (AP), April 9, 2015

Personal injury and third-party negligence: an overview

Accidents happen.

That above sentence underscores about as succinctly as possible a fundamental reality attendant to human beings and their interactions with others.

A tandem reality is that those accidents often result in devastating — sometimes fatal — injuries to persons who are victimized by the negligence of third parties.

Indeed, there is a commonality attached to many personal injuries that befall individuals in Southern California and throughout the rest of the country, namely this: Those injuries are directly caused or centrally contributed to by other persons failing to act in reasonably thoughtful ways.

Any such lapse in prudent conduct or behavior is lamentable, of course.

And, often, it is unlawful, with applicable state and federal laws existing to ensure meaningful recoveries to accident victims injured through third-party negligence.

The attorneys at the Los Angeles-area Doyle Law firm proudly represent accident victims who are pursuing remedies against negligent actors who are responsible for injuries that are compromising their health and livelihoods.

In our fast and frenetic world, the sources of such injuries range widely, from medical malpractice acts and omissions to reckless driving behaviors. They further encompass product liability resulting from design and manufacturing defects to nursing home neglect and a broad universe of other possibilities.

Although strong legal intervention cannot, of course, undo an injury, it can serve to hold accountable those who are responsible for it and to help a victim receive badly needed assistance for medical costs, lost wages, rehabilitative therapies and pain and suffering.

Doyle law attorneys, led by principal lawyer Conal Doyle, provide knowledgeable, passionate and vigorous representation to injury victims needing proven legal advocacy.

We invite readers to visit us online at our Serious Injury page. We welcome your interest and inquiries, and will strive with each of our blog posts to present our audience with timely and relevant subject matter that is both meaningful and personally useful.