You should expect the larger company to get in more accidents but you read the stats you will find that is not the case.
I just looked up the safety stats for Werner and Fedwrex, and I don't see your numbers at all.
Fedrex reported to the dot.
77,019 drivers
1,923,280,000 miles in 2015
1,484 dot reportable crashes
34 fatalities
Werner:
9,931 drivers
952,452,762 miles
1,1076 dot reported crashes
42 fatalities
Fedwrex drove more then twice as many miles, yet got in significantly less fatalities. Fedwrex got in significantly more dot reportable accidents but less accidents per a mile than Werner. And when Werner wreaks, you are more likely to be killed.
The OP has a point you follow the numbers from all the mega-crap training companies, they all kill more people and have more accidents per a mile then their counterparts.
Acceptable loss ratio
Discussion in 'Report A BAD Trucking Company Here' started by Chasingthesky, May 22, 2016.
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As a insurance carrier, we have stats that we rely on in determining our large account pricing. OUR stats show that we can EXPECT between 18-23% frequency based on power unit count. The difficulty is in predicting
the severity aspect of the frequency.......if 20 out 100 power units will have a loss......how many will be under $ 25K (60%), how many will be $25K to 100K and so on........the largest losses are always out there it's just hard to predict which loss will turn into the limits loss just looking at a "book" of trucking business. -
I calculated out several of the DOT-reported accidents per a million mile and non of them corresponded directly with that data. For example, Gordon is now Hearland/Gordon and both numbers given are not congruent with todays data. UPS and UPS Freight both have much lower numbers then stated. I am not in the mood to check them all but every one I did was not accurate with what you posted? -
I messed up, those numbers are twice what it should be (the fmcsa counts mileage by year and accidents over 24 months)
Gordon: http://safer.fmcsa.dot.gov/query.as...napshot&query_param=USDOT&query_string=190991
109 accidents (24 months)
215 million miles/year
.25 accidents/million miles (not .51)
Heartland:
http://safer.fmcsa.dot.gov/query.as...napshot&query_param=USDOT&query_string=134697
246 accidents (24 months)
235 million miles/year
.52 accidents/million (not 1.05)Toomanybikes Thanks this. -
FedEx:
Not FedEx:
http://www.buildagroundbiz.com/index.aspxToomanybikes Thanks this. -
Now your numbers seem a lot closer. So these are your Calculations?
For UPS Parcel i get:
1,834 accidents / (2,560.802417 million miles a year x 2) = .36 accidents/million
UPS Ground:
512 accidents / (566.049529 million miles a year x 2) = .45
both are significantly better then Gordon or Heartland! -
Fedrex reported to the dot.
77,019 drivers
1,923,280,000 miles in 2015
1,484 dot reportable crashes
34 fatalities
Fedrex Freight:
19,911 drivers
995,215,918 miles
819 dot reportable crashes
21 fatalities
Werner:
9,931 drivers
952,452,762 miles
1,1076 dot reported crashes
42 fatalities
The point being the mega-crap companies do indeed get in more accidents and kill more people. -
Gordon, Walmart, McKee, Con-Way etc still had fewer accidents per million miles, but UPS is definitely above average.
Heartland still runs a separate DOT number from Gordon, but they're intermingling trailers so I imagine they'll eventually run everything under Heartland. -
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Con-Way is what I expect.
Obviously Walmart deserves recognition and is of comparable size to be a leader in the trend.
Gordon has not updated their freight miles since 2013 which leads me to believe that more of their freight and miles are now under the dot number of Heartland not Gordon and therefore things look scewed better then they are even though Gordon has been a good company.
McKee is just not in the same size class as the others but is interesting non the less.
Same with the Haz-mat category. The ATA successfully lobbied to remove the whole securement/weight category form the Safer. Seems some mega's like to haul heavy and loose and not suffer the consequences.
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