Skip to main content

Enforcement triples in CVSA’s operation safe driver

Officers working as part of the US Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance’s (CSVA) Operation Safe Driver pulled over 74,765 during the weeklong enforcement blitz in October, nearly three times the 2012 figure, the group said. Of those, 29,048 drivers were in trucks or buses, while the rest were in passenger vehicles, CVSA said in a statement on 9 January. Car drivers were cited or warned for speeding 56 per cent of the time they were pulled over during the enforcement effort, compared with just 7.3 per ce
January 10, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
Officers working as part of the US Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance’s (CSVA) Operation Safe Driver pulled over 74,765 during the weeklong enforcement blitz in October, nearly three times the 2012 figure, the group said.

Of those, 29,048 drivers were in trucks or buses, while the rest were in passenger vehicles, CVSA said in a statement on 9 January.

Car drivers were cited or warned for speeding 56 per cent of the time they were pulled over during the enforcement effort, compared with just 7.3 per cent of commercial drivers. Speeding was the most common citation or warnings for both classes of driver, followed by failure to use a seat belt and ignoring traffic control devices, CVSA said. The percentage of drivers cited or warned for speeding and seat belt use declined in both driver categories.

“Operation Safe Driver continues to increase its impact each year in targeting problem behaviour by all drivers, whether they drive a passenger car or a CMV, and by taking action on those who need it,” CVSA president Thomas Fuller from the New York State Police said. “We will continue to grow our enforcement and outreach efforts until we can eliminate the driving behaviour that has been shown to cause or contribute to crashes involving large trucks and buses.”

Related Content

  • Cruise 'pauses' driverless operations in San Francisco
    October 30, 2023
    California DMV has suspended Cruise's driverless permit - but it can still test AVs with driver
  • Lagos would welcome careful drivers
    June 30, 2020
    An index has revealed the most dangerous parts of the world for car crashes, with cities in Africa, the US, India and Russia particularly challenging – although the rest of us might head to Calgary in Canada.
  • Lack of communication jeopardises road weather information
    February 3, 2012
    A lack of communications means that the case for more widespread use of road weather information systems is still not happening, says Vaisala's Jon Tarleton. More effective exchanges up and down the political scale are needed, he adds
  • Automatic speed enforcement in Finland
    February 1, 2012
    In 2004, Finland extended its automatic speed enforcement from 280 to 800 road kilometres. Risto Öörni of the VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland, explains the costs and the benefits. Automatic speed enforcement in Finland is operated by the police and is based on cameras installed on poles along main roads and mobile semi-automatic speed enforcement units installed in police cars.