play_arrow
Georgia NOW Live Streaming Now
play_arrow
The feds want in on MARTA | metro DA's rally to push back on clearly racist law
A ProPublica investigation into U.S. Rep. Mike Collins’ trucking business safety record sparked a renewal of safety advocates calling for stronger trucking regulations.
The investigation found that crashes involving truckers that worked for the company have killed five people and injured more than 50 others over the past 25 years. It also found that the company has a higher rate of unsafe driving and speeding violations per mile than the majority of trucking companies with substantial miles.
While Collins, a candidate for U.S. Senate, has focused on revoking commercial driver’s licenses for people who are not citizens, Zach Cahalan, the executive director of the Truck Safety Coalition, said the focus should be on proven safety technology.
“One being speed kills. We know 20% of fatal crashes occur at speeds 70-plus miles an hour,” he said. “The technology to limit the maximum speed of large trucks has been available for 20-plus years, off the lot and not required to be used.”
Speed-limiting technology has long been required in Europe, Cahalan said, but Collins has opposed federal rules requiring speed limiters on trucks.
Cahalan said automatic emergency braking would be another proven technology to help limit fatalities.
“That technology is a game changer. It is poised to do the greatest good, to cut in half, roughly, the number of fatalities that occur when a large truck strikes the rear of a passenger vehicle,” he said.
However, Collins has claimed that the technology is expensive and doesn’t work very well. A proposed mandate for the technology has been delayed by the Trump administration.
Written by: Jenna Eason
Business Georgia economy Georgia Politics trucking industry
The Rick Smith Show is one of America's most popular working-class programs, broadcasting the class war to restore America to the people who built it since 2005. Streaming live weeknights from 9pm-11pm EST on YouTube and Twitch TV, airing nightly in primetime on Free Speech TV, and heard on radio stations in major markets including New York City on WBAI 99.5 FM, Los Angeles on KPFK 90.7 FM, and Chicago on WCPT AM 820, the show delivers a direct, honest approach to the issues that matter. By working people, for working people, it's a place where facts are center, science is real, and everyone gets a seat at the table—no puppets, no focus groups, no talking points. Host Rick Smith grew up in the working-class neighborhoods of Cleveland, going from delivering papers as a boy to driving 18-wheelers as a proud union member, bringing the grit of a Teamster and the voice of America's working families to the airwaves coast-to-coast.
closeCopyright Georgia NOW Radio - 2026
Post comments (0)