Articles Tagged with conspicuity

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Log trucks hauling tree-length loads of pulp wood to paper and fiberboard mills extending far beyond a trailer’s end present nasty hazards on rural Georgia’s highways. Drivers approaching log trucks from the rear or side on dark roads are at risk of being impaled or beheaded. Extensive experience has taught us the problems and some ways to deal with them, though we will not publish the “secret sauce” for insurance company representatives to see.

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1. Inadequate insurance on Georgia log trucks.

Georgia law requires only $100,000 liability insurance for 18-wheeler log trucks with tree-length timber that operate only within Georgia’s state lines. This is grossly inadequate for catastrophic injury and wrongful death cases. Through decades of experience, we have found ways to locate other insurance coverages and multiply the potential recovery. In a recent log truck case in rural Georgia, we recovered sixteen times the truck’s insurance policy limit—$1.6 million—although the coverage on the truck was only $100,000.

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log-load-300x200Log trucks crashes are distressingly common tragedies across rural Georgia, often causing death or terrible injuries.

Most log trucks operating in the middle of Georgia operate exclusively intrastate, inside the state of Georgia, and do not cross state lines. They are governed by the Georgia Forest Product Trucking Rules, which exempt applicability of numerous provisions of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations. Log trucks operating near state lines may cross into neighboring states, subjecting them to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations.

Length of loads.

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