Lessons can be learned from Interstate 84 tragedy, says Sullivan’s top safety official

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Truck pushed the car across lanes into center median

MONTICELLO – Three people died in a predawn disaster on Interstate
84 Wednesday morning. Sullivan County’s Commissioner of Public Safety,
Richard Martinkovic, said there is a good chance they could have survived,
perhaps unharmed, if they had done one thing.

“If you break down on the highway, you’ve got to get clear
of your vehicle,” Martinkovic warned.

That means getting off the road and off the shoulder, preferably behind
a guard rail if there is one.

The three who died were in the vehicle when it was rear-ended by a tractor-trailer.
The driver of the car was on the phone with a 911 operator, who heard
the deadly crash.

Martinkovic, who is involved at the state level with accident response
planning and training, told the county Legislature’s Public Safety
Committee on Thursday that special training is given to those who respond
to crashes.

“Police, our fire, our EMS and our highway workers and the tow industry,
that as they come to these accidents, they are able to work safely to
do the job they have to do.”

Martinkovic noted that is one reason why police, when they stop a vehicle
on a major highway, always approach the passenger side of the car, never
the driver side. He recalled two examples in the past year or so, including
one in New Jersey where a trooper, standing near a stopped vehicle but
close to the road, was hit and killed by another vehicle.




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