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Milk Trucks and Trucking Safety

June 22nd, 2010

Milk may do a body good, but surprisingly it can be a contributing factor in truck accidents. When a commercial tanker truck carries a liquid such as milk, it can make the vehicle difficult to control for a number of reasons. The tanks on tanker trucks are elevated well above the roadway, making such trucks top heavy and leaving their centers of gravity much higher than those of vehicles with lower profiles. This makes tanker trucks more vulnerable to rollover accidents. Liquid in tanks (often thousands of gallons of it) can surge forward and back during acceleration or braking and side-to-side when the vehicle is cornering leaving the driver struggling to control the vehicle.

To help control the surging of liquid loads, tanks are equipped with baffles. Baffles are dividers inside the tanks with openings in their tops and bottoms that allow the liquid cargo in the tank to move, but without the surging that takes place in a wide-open or smooth bore tank. However, there are major problems with baffles: they control only the forward and back surging of liquid loads and do nothing to control the side-to-side surge that can accompany cornering in tanker trucks.

In addition, baffles are not allowed in tankers carrying food grade loads. Because they are too difficult to clean, baffles could lead to contamination of foods such as milk and are therefore illegal on trucks carrying such loads, leaving drivers of milk trucks and other liquid food grade loads at constant risk of dangerous surges.

In one recent example of a milk truck accident, on June 7, a semi-trailer carrying a load of milk flipped onto its side and skidded into the ditch while traveling on U.S. 68 in Greene County, Ohio. The Ohio State Highway Patrol is continuing its investigation into this truck accident and it is not known if surges played a part, but experience tells me it is likely. Luckily this accident occurred at an early morning hour on a nearly empty highway and no other vehicles were involved. The driver of the big rig received only minor injuries.

Unfortunately, as I’ve seen in the cases involving milk trucks that I’ve handled, such a lucky outcome is not always the case.

Drivers of trucks transporting milk and other food grade liquids need to be especially cautious when operating their vehicles. They must understand fully the safest way to negotiate turns; the challenges involved in starting and stopping a vehicle with a smooth bore tank; and the precautions necessary when driving such a vehicle into an intersection where a surge could carry the truck into the intersection despite the driver’s best efforts to stop.

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Fatal Passenger Car-Milk Truck Accident in Lakeview, Michigan

October 7th, 2009

I offer my condolences to the family of 73-year-old Donna Donaldson who died in yesterday’s truck accident in Lakeview, Michigan, yet another family who has suffered tragic loss due to a big rig wreck. The accident occurred yesterday (Tuesday, October 6) on M-91 in Lakeview, Michigan when Donaldson’s vehicle apparently entered the intersection and was struck on the driver’s side by a tanker truck hauling milk in a double trailer.

Witnesses state that Donaldson’s vehicle was dragged several hundred feet by the tanker truck, perhaps indicating excessive speed on the part of the big rig. While there is a traffic light at the intersection in question, Lakeview police are still working to determine which vehicle had the right of way prior to the crash.

I have experience handling this type of crash. In some cases, the truck driver will refuse to be held accountable and make excuses that it was the fault of the other vehicle, and while it is not clear which vehicle had the right of way upon entering the intersection. I have handled milk truck cases with Michigan milk trucks in the past. One peculiarity of milk trucks is that they are not permitted by federal statute to have baffles. Baffles help keep liquid from “sloshing,” which can make the truck jerk unexpectedly and handle precariously in emergency situations. Baffles are not permitted in order to help ensure the milk does not go bad. Milk trucks are especially dangerous because of this fact.

Professional truck drivers are trained to expect the unexpected. They are expected to be aware of all hazards and potential hazards on the road and to always have an “out” or escape route in mind. It is essential for motor carrier inspectors, police, and lawyers with accident reconstructionists to determine exactly what occurred.

If you or someone you know needs legal advice about an accident with a semi-truck or other commercial vehicle, contact our Michigan truck accident attorneys for a free consultation.

Truck Accident Summary
Day: Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Type of Accident: Fatality Truck Crash
Location: Lakeview, Michigan

 

 

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