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Whenever a driver approaches a work zone in a motor vehicle, they are met by ample warnings and signals that urge caution. There are orange cones and barrels, yellow-vested workers, reflectors and floodlights, and distinctive, diamond-shaped signage designed to guide traffic safely through the zone. Yet, even with all these warnings, there’s often one more plea: “Slow Down: My Daddy (or Mommy) Works Here.”
Such a vivid appeal may seem a little personal and dramatic at first. Unfortunately, it’s motivated by some hard realities. In the last five years, work zone crashes in the U.S. resulted in over 4,400 deaths and 200,000 injuries, according to the Federal Highway Administration (FHWA).
Unsurprisingly, more fatal crashes occur in the warmer months, when there is typically an increase in both road construction and travel. But you may be surprised to learn that 85% of work zone crash fatalities are drivers or their passengers. So when drivers exercise greater caution in work zones, the lives they save may indeed be their own.
Every road construction project should have a plan for managing traffic and maximizing safety.
Government agencies, nonprofits, and construction industry organizations provide guidelines and resources to aid construction contractors in developing work zone safety protocols. It stands to reason that any company with vehicles should also take steps to educate their drivers in work zone safety.
In that spirit, FHWA urges parties “on both sides of the barrel” to take responsibility for reducing the dismaying number of work zone casualties. For the driver side of the traffic barrel, they offer the following guidelines:
Although these guidelines may seem like simple common sense, the facts clearly show the need to keep safety foremost in the minds of commercial drivers, especially in work zones. After all, those road crews are working to improve the very roads your fleet and drivers depend on.
Subscribe to our Inside WEX blog and follow us on social media for the insider view on everything WEX, from payments innovation to what it means to be a WEXer.
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