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TIM SAKRY Safety Manager, Bauerly Cos. |
The accident that
started it all happened on the evening of Oct. 2, 1997, in
the northwest Minneapolis suburb of Brooklyn Park. A semi-end
dump truck operator thought she could haul more loads of dirt
per hour by running red lights at a quiet county road intersection.
Each time she took the risk, her probability for a crash compounded.
At about 11:00 that night, her
luck ran out. Plowing through the intersection at full speed,
the dump truck slammed into the side of a Geo Metro subcompact,
pushing the car down the road sideways 160 ft and killing
its driver, a 21-year-old woman who was five months pregnant.
Investigators discovered that the
dump truck operator was not only holding an invalid commercial
driver's license, but the truck also had insufficient tire
tread, faulty brakes and was overloaded by 6,500 lb. If the
truck and documents had been inspected earlier that day or
the night before, the vehicle would have been put out of service
until the operator was replaced and repairs were made.
A year later, the operator, whose
commercial license had been revoked for drunk driving, was
convicted on two counts of criminal vehicular homicide and
sentenced to two years in prison. Because of the carelessness
of the operator and her employer, the Minnesota Dept. of Transportation
launched an official investigation into construction truck
crashes and suggested ways to improve safety.
James Denn, transportation commissioner
at the time, demanded that local contractors find a consistent
method to educate their operators and trucking subcontractors
on how to drive vehicles safely in and around MnDOT jobsites.
If not, he said the department would impose its own certification
guidelines, increase random roadside vehicle inspections and
tighten over-the-road regulations on such vehicles as semi-end
dump trucks, belly dumps and concrete-transit mixers.
"It was an ultimatum,"
says Rick Johnson, truck safety manager of Tiller Corp., a
Maple Grove, Minn.-based concrete and asphalt contractor employing
50 full-time truck drivers. Tim Sakry of Bauerly Cos., a safety
manager with 400 drivers in Sauk Rapids, says contractors
wanted to devise their own "police effort" with
MnDOT rather than having one imposed on them.
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| GOOD
COP State police Capt. Urquhart helped organize
CTOT advisory and board amd steering committee. |
The stakes were high. The Federal
Motor Carrier Safety Administration in 1999 estimated that
truck crashes cost liable parties an average of $3.5 million
for fatal accidents similar to the crash in Brooklyn Park
and $217,005 for injury accidents. Nationwide, that totaled
$32 billion annually. And Minnesota knew it had a construction
problem. In 1997, safety out-of-service rates for trucks on
Minnesota Dept. of Transportation projects ranked twice as
high as the national average, according to Capt. Ken Urquhart,
District 4700 commander of Minnesota State Patrol's Commercial
Vehicle Section.
In 1998, Tiller, Bauerly and several
local construction firms, along with Minnesota state agencies
and trade associations, responded to the challenge by starting
a one-year pilot training program tailored specifically for
construction-truck safety and operations. That pub lic-private
collaboration today has developed into a multi-course curriculum
administered and instructed by St. Cloud State University,
MnDOT, Minnesota State Patrol and safety managers from local
specialty contracting firms.
Originally starting with less than
200 participants, the state's Construction Truck Operator
Training (CTOT) program now trains more than 1,200 each year
and is starting to attract unexpectedly broader interest in
the upper Midwest.
It is no secret that vocational
trucks are responsible for a large proportion of injuries
on projects (ENR 6/12/00 p. 36). According to a landmark 2001
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health report,
Building Safer Highway Work Zones, there were 841 road construction
fatalities between 1992-1998. Of 492 occurring inside work
zones, the leading cause of death for construction workers
on foot was trucks (61%), followed by construction equipment
(30%). In the 110 fatalities where equipment operators were
victims, NIOSH found that the primary causes were heavy equipment
(53%) and trucks (26%).
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| FINAL
EXAM Hands-on training puts drivers in real-life
scenarios. |
The agency now is researching visibility
around materials and equipment on jobsites in order to evaluate
"the effectiveness of prevention measures in work zones,"
says David Fosbroke, NIOSH statistician in Morgantown, W.
Va. These include such things as proximity alarms and sensors.
Fosbroke hopes to use the data to develop training materials,
but results are at least three years away.
CTOT is ahead of the game. Many
safety professionals agree that construction trucks are a
big safety issue but complain that this risk-management niche
does not offer "a heck of a lot" in terms of comprehensive,
hands-on training for truck drivers, says Rick Longstaff,
president of Burlington, Wis.-based Vista Training, a supplier
of equipment training videos and books.
And the prevalence of small independent
trucking firms in the industry makes the training and safety
job harder. This is especially so in the Midwest, says Wayne
Murphy, director of highway/heavy division for the Associated
General Contractors of Minnesota. "Construction truck
driving is different from driving over the road. Many truck
drivers in Minnesota are teamsters, but they don't have a
training program like this that I'm aware of," he says.
The International Brotherhood of Teamsters has been looking
at ways to establish regional training programs but advises
drivers to attend entry-level and finishing courses at the
Professional Truck Driver Institute in Alexandria, Va. PTDI
offers classroom and hands-on courses for all types of trucks
but none are yet geared solely toward construction.
"Just because you know how
to drive a truck doesn't mean you know how to drive a construction
truck," says Larry Ouellette, driver improvement program
coordinator and CTOT lead instructor at St. Cloud State University's
Minnesota Highway Safety and Research Center (MHSRC). The
160-acre, 29-year-old training facility features a 3-mile-long
paved and 1-mile-long off-road test track for cars, trucks
and snowmobiles. Ouellette and his team specialize in teaching
drivers advanced techniques for handling such things as skids,
blowouts, unusual weather and collision avoidance. In addition
to CTOT, MHSRC trains 1,200 law-enforcement officers and 18,000
senior citizens each year.
The CTOT program has a seven-course
curriculum covering advanced driving, behind-the-wheel training,
transporting hazardous materials, securing loads, permitting
and load limits. MHSRC coordinates the program, while MnDOT
provides community outreach and the Minnesota State Patrol
monitors vehicle inspections. Officials from all three agencies
instruct CTOT classes in the field. Courses range in length
from four to eight hours and cost between $25 and $200 per
person. Most contractors pick up the costs for their employees.
CTOT typically begins in January
and wraps by the end of April. "Getting the facts before
the season starts is the biggest plus," Sakry says. "It
also helps break down barriers" because drivers already
know state inspectors from attending the classes, he adds.
Safety programs generally are a
tough sell because "measuring something that doesn't
happen is the hardest part," says Ouellette. But contractors
using CTOT are seeing results in insurance premiums. Johnson
says that having drivers enrolled in CTOT each year has lowered
his rates by as much as 50%. Likewise, Sakry says his company's
truck inspection and out-of-service rating has become "significantly
lower" than the state average.
Urquhart, who leads a group of
state police commercial vehicle inspectors, helped to organize
CTOT's public-private steering committee, which meets twice
each year. He says CTOT is starting to educate drivers in
smaller firms not actively involved in any specialized truck
training. "We want to get the ones who take the risks
every day," he says.
Despite its success, CTOT is in
danger of leveling out as it runs through interested drivers
and companies. MnDOT only "recommends" that drivers
are CTOT trainedthe certification is not yet a state
requirement for contractors competing for MnDOT jobs. Howard
Steele, state police training director, fears that CTOT may
eventually become a refresher program for returning attendees.
But not yet. MHSRC expects next year's program to attract
1,800-2,000 attendees, CTOT's all-time highest.
(Photo top and middle by Tudor Hampton
for ENR, bottom courtesy of MHSRC)
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