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Tailgating Kills
As many of you may know by
now, I dont like tailgaters. Tailgating
is not only
dangerous, it's stupid. I mean, how close do they have to get to feel like they
are getting
somewhere? Five feet? Ten? Twenty? Someone has to tell these people that they are
not going
to get there any sooner if they get any closer. Especially a car behind a truck.
How can they
see?
I said just that
to a group of drivers recently and
one of them
argued that
when he does it, he is trying to make the slow car move over into the slow
lane, where he should
be. But then what about the next car who is only fifty feet ahead? Is he going
to tailgate
him too, so that he will move over? And the next one too? I have seen drivers
do just that,
many times. They think that they can get somewhere by "pushing" their
way through.
All that effort and risk, just to squeeze out an extra two or three miles per
hour.
You
may have heard about the accident in Chicago last month, where a truck overturned,
spilling
a hazardous material. They had to shut down the highway to clean it up and
it took all day.
The driver had a drivers license that was in the name of a man who had been
dead for seven
years. But, before they figured out that the license was a fake, they said
it wasn't the drivers
fault. He said he was swerving to avoid a car that had cut him off. When I
first heard the
news, I was happy that it wasn't the drivers fault, because I know how some
companies always
love to blame the driver. But then the next day, I found out that witnesses
came forward and
claimed that he was tailgating and speeding, purposely trying not
to let anyone cut
in front of him. But, of course they cut in front of him anyway. Then, they
found out that
his log book indicated that he was supposed to be sleeping in Danville, Illinois
and that he
was out of hours. Then, the fake drivers license and then they found out that
he was an illegal
immigrant. Luckily nobody was killed, but there were many injuries including
several firemen
and police officers, who were exposed to the fumes of the hazardous material.
There was
another accident,that also happened in Chicago, about five years ago, where
two people got
killed by a tailgater. Their car had broken down in the center lane, on a busy
six lane highway
(three lanes in each direction). All of the traffic was going around them on
both sides of
their car and it was impossible to get out, so they stayed in the car, with
their hazzard lights
flashing. The tailgater never saw them because he couldn't see
them. All he
could see was the
back of the car in front of him, because he was following so closely. When
the lead car switched
lanes at the last second, he had no choice but to smash into the stalled car.
He was charged
with reckless homocide and is spending a few years in jail. I talked to a driver
who was a
friend of the driver who did it. He didn't think it was his friends fault.
He said that it
could happen to anyone who is simply trying to keep up with traffic.
Then
there's Paul,
a very good friend of mine. He's a professional driver for over twenty years
and he usually
never tailgates. His truck was fully loaded and he was going down a very long,
steep hill somewhere
in Tennessee. His brakes were getting hot when he reached a small bridge at
the bottom of the
hill. He had about two hundred feet of space between him and the car in front
of him. Suddenly,
the car in front of him stopped on a two lane bridge for no apparent reason.
If he was to hit
her, he would have killed her for sure. So he took evasive action. He went
around her and smashed
a parked car with nobody in it, instead. But with all that weight and the downgrade,
he still
couldn't stop. He wound up going into a ditch, nose first, before he finally
stopped. According
to the police and even his company, it wasn't his fault. With all that weight
going downhill,
he would have had to maintain a following distance of at least five hundred
feet in order to
stop in time. Which would have been impossible because cars were constantly
passing him. Maybe
he should have been driving a little slower. Some hills have different speed
limits for different
weights. On "Cabbage" (a big hill in Oregon), the recommended speed
limit for a fully
loaded truck is eighteen miles per hour. I like that speed because if my brakes
are going to
fail, I want it to happen at a slow speed.
Many truck drivers love to complain
about all
the four wheelers that dont understand just how difficult it can be to stop
a truck (myself
included). But, if we all are so sure that this many people dont get it, then
who is going
to compensate for the ignorant? Someone has to. Otherwise there will be a whole
bunch of dead
people.
These are just
a few examples off the top of my head.
People get
caught up in trying
to go with the flow. But sometimes, when traffic is heavy and all of the four
wheelers are
only maintaining a following distance of a carlength or less, a truck still
needs more. Some
drivers will argue that as soon as they create a safe enough space, a car or
two always jumps
in there. And I know this is true. That's when I say that sometimes you have
to go a little
slower than them. It's a law of nature. Cars do circles around trucks because
they can. They
take off faster and they stop faster. You have to except this fact and get
on with being the
professional that you are. If you think you can keep up with them, then you
are just a four
wheeler driver who happens to be driving a big truck. A lot of responsibility
comes with those
eighteen wheels. Please be carefull out there. In an otherwise crazy, hyped
up world, you can
still find a voice of sanity here at 10-4
Magazine and at BigCityDriver.com.
Thanks
for listening.
Ken Skaggs
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