Many drivers may already be intimidated by the many large semi-trucks and tractor-trailers that they encounter on Bridgeport’s roads; the last thing they want to even consider is that those operating such vehicles might literally be asleep at the wheel. Some might try to argue that the potential threat posed by drowsy drivers is overblown, and statistics may seem to even back up this point. Indeed, research information shared bythe National Center for Biotechnology Informationshows that fatigue was listed as the primary cause in only 1.5 percent of fatal truck accidents in 2013. Yet those compiling this same information recognize that there are potentially huge gaps in data collection accuracy in these incidents. Thus, the actual numbers may be quite higher.
So just how big of a problem is truck driver fatigue? The concern is sufficient enough for the federal government to impose strict hours-of-service regulations in order to prevent it. According tothe Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, these are as follows:
Truck drivers are mandated to record their working hours, as well as those mandatory rest periods described above. Such records may help to prove that fatigue may have been a factor ina truck accidentby exposing an unwillingness on the part of a driver to conform to federal regulations by either obeying the mandatory hours-of-service schedule or maintaining a record of their activity.