Truck Talk with Jon Hollan

Truck Talk: Driving in Severe Weather

Severe weather demands adjustments from commercial truck drivers. When drivers fail to comply, Kentucky crashes become preventable tragedies.

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Operating an 80,000-pound commercial truck in severe weather requires more than skill. It requires the discipline to stop when conditions demand it. Federal regulations set a clear standard for how commercial drivers must respond to dangerous weather, and the failure to follow that standard has caused some of the most serious truck crashes on Kentucky interstates. This piece looks at what the law requires, what drivers are trained to do, and how poor weather driving decisions become part of a crash claim.

What the FMCSA Requires in Dangerous Weather

49 CFR § 392.14 mandates extreme caution in hazardous conditions including snow, ice, sleet, fog, mist, rain, dust, or smoke when those conditions adversely affect visibility or traction. The rule requires drivers to reduce speed and, when conditions are sufficiently dangerous, to discontinue driving until the vehicle can be safely operated again. The CSA program administered by the FMCSA specifically tracks hazardous weather condition violations as a safety performance indicator for carriers.

The only exception allows a driver to continue to the nearest safe stopping point if stopping immediately would itself create a greater danger to the driver or others on the road. This is a narrow exception and does not permit continuing to a delivery destination.

How Large Trucks Behave Differently in Bad Weather

Commercial trucks handle fundamentally differently from passenger cars in adverse weather. The physics of stopping a loaded semi-truck traveling at 65 mph are dramatically different from stopping a passenger car:

  • A fully loaded truck at highway speed can take over 500 feet to stop under normal conditions. Rain, ice, or standing water significantly extends that distance.
  • A trailer can swing independently from the cab, leading to a jackknife or rollovers, especially when braking hard on a slick surface.
  • An empty or lightly loaded trailer has less traction weight over the drive axles, making the truck more susceptible to skidding and jackknifing than a fully loaded one.
  • High-profile trailers act as wind sails, and crosswinds can tip a trailer during turns or on elevated sections of highway.

Pre-Trip Planning and Weather Awareness

Professional truck drivers are expected to check weather forecasts before beginning a trip. The National Weather Service provides route-specific weather forecasts, road condition information, and advisories that drivers should consult. Dispatchers also have an obligation to know what conditions their drivers will encounter and to route or delay shipments accordingly.

Kentucky’s mountainous terrain in the eastern part of the state creates weather patterns that can change rapidly. A driver heading south on I-75 from Lexington through the Daniel Boone National Forest corridor can encounter markedly different conditions from one county to the next. Weather awareness is not optional, it is a component of safe professional driving.

When Speed Does Not Match Conditions

One of the most common findings in weather-related truck crashes is that the driver maintained near-posted-speed-limit travel through conditions that demanded significantly lower speeds. A posted speed limit represents a safe speed under ideal conditions. Under KRS 189.390, Kentucky requires all drivers to operate at speeds appropriate for existing road conditions, not simply within the posted limit.

When a truck crash occurs in bad weather, the ECM data showing the vehicle’s speed in the seconds before impact is compared against weather records for that location at that time. Attorney Jon Hollan has discussed in Truck Talk how this comparison between actual speed and objectively poor conditions often makes speed-in-weather violations some of the most compelling evidence in a crash case. For more on how truck accident claims work in Kentucky, see our truck accident practice area page.

Training Requirements and Weather Driving Skills

The FMCSA’s Entry-Level Driver Training (ELDT) rule, effective February 7, 2022, established minimum training content that CDL applicants must complete before taking their skills test. 49 CFR Part 380 outlines the theory and behind-the-wheel training requirements, which include content on how to operate a CMV in adverse weather conditions. A driver who has not completed required ELDT, or whose carrier hired them before proper training was completed, may lack the foundational knowledge to make safe decisions in a Kentucky ice storm or severe thunderstorm.

Beyond ELDT, many carriers provide additional defensive driving training and weather-specific instruction. When a carrier skips or minimizes this ongoing training to save costs, and a driver then makes a poor decision in dangerous weather conditions, the carrier’s training failure is part of the negligence picture that emerges after the crash.

The Role of Carrier Safety Culture

Weather-related crashes often reveal something deeper about a carrier’s safety culture. A carrier that trains drivers to park and wait out severe weather, maintains appropriate delivery timelines that account for weather delays, and does not penalize drivers for reporting unsafe conditions is demonstrably different from a carrier that tracks every minute of delay and pressures drivers to push through. Post-crash discovery of carrier communications, bonus and penalty structures, and internal safety policies often tells that story clearly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are truck drivers required to stop driving in bad weather? +
Yes, when conditions become sufficiently dangerous. 49 CFR § 392.14 requires drivers to discontinue operations when weather makes it unsafe to continue. The driver must first reduce speed and may continue only to the nearest safe stopping point if stopping immediately creates greater danger.
Why are empty trucks more dangerous in severe weather? +
An empty or lightly loaded trailer has less weight over the drive axles, reducing traction and making the truck more prone to jackknifing and skidding on slippery surfaces. High-profile empty trailers also catch wind more easily. The FMCSA considers the loaded condition of the vehicle relevant to safe operating assessments.
How is a truck’s speed in bad weather proven after a crash? +
The truck’s electronic control module records speed data in the seconds before a crash. That ECM data, compared against National Weather Service records and road condition reports for that location and time, can establish whether the driver was operating at a speed appropriate for existing conditions.
Can a delivery deadline ever justify driving through dangerous weather? +
No. Under 49 CFR Part 392, no commercial or contractual obligation justifies operating a vehicle unsafely. A carrier that pressures a driver to meet a deadline through dangerous weather conditions shares responsibility for any resulting crash. Delivery schedules do not override federal safety regulations.

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