It's important to note that sensors in back-up cameras can have a difficult time detecting thin, cylindrical objects like poles, and may not detect soft objects (people) at all.  -  Photo: Instructional Technologies Inc.

It's important to note that sensors in back-up cameras can have a difficult time detecting thin, cylindrical objects like poles, and may not detect soft objects (people) at all.

Photo: Instructional Technologies Inc. 

Did you know that 60% of delivery crashes happen in the parking lot? Most safety professionals spend most of their time focused on roadway collisions. This is for good reason: higher speeds can mean more injuries and higher costs. But almost two-thirds of a delivery fleet’s collisions happen in a parking lot and involve a fixed or stationary object.

Ironically, these crashes are almost worse for a fleet than a bigger crash because they don't meet the insurance deductible, so the costs come straight out of a fleet's profit.

These tips can help you save thousands of dollars per year or more on the most common cause of delivery vehicle crashes.

1. Address the Root Causes of Parking Lot Collisions: Rushing and Distraction

Parking lot crashes are often caused by driver inattention or rushing. Delivery drivers face tremendously tight time schedules and overlapping delivery windows to accommodate up to 30 deliveries per day. Add in the same pressures every human with a family feels — terrible traffic, a sick kid, tough financial situations, an annoying neighbor —and it’s easy to understand how they feel rushed and distracted.

Help your drivers combat the pressure with a combination of training and frequent reminders. Make defensive driving training, including a heavy emphasis on distractions, required for all new drivers. Give regular safety messages to all drivers about the importance of focusing and finishing a task before moving onto the next one.

As one wise driver manager said, “I ask you to do a lot, but I demand you do just one thing at a time.” For example, don’t start thinking about paperwork until the truck is in park. Focus.

2. Train Drivers to Get Out And Look

The best approach to avoiding fixed and stationary object collisions is to apply the GOALden rule: “Get Out And Look!” Inform drivers that the company expects them to re-inspect their surroundings as often as needed. Low parking lot speeds make it easy to stop, activate the truck’s flashers, and hop out for a quick visual scan before making a tight maneuver or pulling under an awning.

If drivers feel too rushed to put this into practice, remind them that they’ll finish faster if they get it right the first time. Nothing slows a driver down more than hitting a pole.

3. Make Cone Drills Impossible

When practicing parking with cones, intentionally make it impossible for drivers to park in the space by just a foot or so. See if your driver will tell you it’s too small or try to force it. Drivers should never assume they can fit into a spot.

If the driver does try to park, they get a valuable learning opportunity in a low-stakes setting. You get to take advantage of a teachable moment and avoid an expensive collision.

Help your drivers combat pressure with a combination of training and frequent reminders.  -  Photo: Instructional Technologies Inc.

Help your drivers combat pressure with a combination of training and frequent reminders.

Photo: Instructional Technologies Inc. 

4. Train Drivers to Back with a Spotter

Many box truck fleets deliver products that require a driver and a helper or team driver. Make training on how to back with a spotter part of a road test. You should require the driver and helper teams to properly demonstrate backing with a spotter as part of a safety meeting. Ask your experienced teams of drivers and spotters for ideas about “close calls” and “tricky situations.”

Additionally, this practice needs to be supported by a strong and actionable policy that holds both the driver and spotter accountable for a backing collision. If the truck is backing, the helper or team driver needs to be out of the truck and spotting the driver as he backs. And it’s always a good idea for the driver to also “Get Out And Look!”

5. Ban Drivers from Busy Lots Altogether

Another idea is simply to ban the truck from unusually busy or congested areas. For example, if you can keep your trucks out of busy fueling stations and tight parking lots, you’ll avoid a lot of incidents. When you know an area will be busy during a time frame, work with the store manager to avoid your delivery windows during that time.

A Director of Safety for a large private fleet reduced parking lot collisions by over 50% per year, simply by banning drivers from using a particular fuel station.

6. Combine Technology with Training

Back-up cameras are proven to reduce backing accidents. But these items should not be considered or treated as “plug and play devices,” no matter what the sales person tells you. Even the best back-up cameras distort the image behind the vehicle to some degree. They should only be used in conjunction with good backing techniques. And as with any new tool, training with the devices is absolutely essential.

Backing sensors, usually installed in the rear bumper, have also emerged as a technology solution. Again, as with the back-up camera, they’re no replacement for good backing techniques. Anecdotally, safety directors have told us the sensors can have a difficult time detecting thin, cylindrical objects like poles, and may not detect soft objects (people) at all.

7. Incentivize Safe Behavior

There are plenty of policies and practices that can have a positive impact on reducing backing accidents as well. As a manager, you can reinforce safety in a positive way, and enforce rules in a negative way.

For example, many fleets have safety bonuses for going a certain period without an incident, or for completing all vehicle inspection reports on time. On the flip side, negative reinforcement — such as citation or termination — can be used for things like a second backing accident or for failing to report a collision. Using both positive and negative reinforcement keeps drivers both accountable and encouraged.

The Bottom Line: Training Prevents Parking Lot Collisions

You may have noticed that all these tips have one thing in common: training! Parking lot incidents may not be as dramatic as big interstate accidents, but they add up quickly and could very easily be costing your fleet far more than “the big one.”

Don’t get caught up in thinking these incidents are minor. Dedicate the necessary resources to train your drivers properly, and you can save a lot of money, and reduce many injuries to your team.

About the Author: Thom Schoenborn is the VP Marketing with Instructional Technologies, Inc. With a copywriting and journalism background, he has several years of experience with trucking OEM and logistics clients. 

Originally posted on Work Truck Online

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