Daily Archives: July 20, 2010

More On Trooper Safety

Published July 20, 2010

Model of an old Massachusetts State Police car

Watch out for Staties. (Ward/Flickr)

With the recent spate of car accidents involving Bay State troopers on duty, the president of the state police union is calling for a crackdown on drunk drivers.

On Monday, in my Q&A about the issue, reporter Curt Nickisch said Massachusetts could do more than enforce its “move over” law in trying to protect emergency responders.

Afterward, I received an e-mail from Howard Cohen, who runs the nonprofit website ResponderSafety.com. Apparently, research to that effect is more than 10 years old.

An edited excerpt of his note:

The issue of public safety personnel getting struck and injured or killed is a growing problem that generally gets little attention, but which is garnering some attention now with the five Massachusetts troopers struck, one fatally, in the past month. In about the same period, a Shelton, Conn., police officer has also been struck and killed, along with three CHP officers and a New Jersey state trooper.

We began our effort in 1998 after one of our members was struck and killed on a Maryland highway, though we soon realized the “struck-by” problem disproportionately affects police officers. On our website, ResponderSafety.com, we track struck-by’s nationwide on a daily basis, track move-over laws and move-over law developments, have free training material, offer a “white paper” that we produced on this issue more than 10 years ago and a great deal more.

The white paper (PDF), dating back to October 1999, warned of many of these problems:

Until recently the “more lights are better” approach, often incorporating variously colored strobes, rotating beacons, and pulses of light, has been in vogue.    This is being rethought in the wake of research and statistics indicating that the multitude of brilliant flashing lights may: (1) effectively blind motorists; (2) attract impaired (drunk, drugged, or dozing) motorists, and (3) emphasize apparatus but obscure response personnel.

That’s exactly what I covered yesterday.

Lobster Salad In The News

Published July 20, 2010

A lobster in Boston Harbor (Jess Bidgood for WBUR)

A lobster in Boston Harbor (Jess Bidgood for WBUR)

When I rounded up the summer’s most predictable news stories, I failed to consider the lobster. There’s good coverage of our favorite summer delicacy around the Hub this week.

This morning NPR reported that life is good for Maine lobsters and lobster eaters — but not so much for lobstermen. Supply is so plentiful that prices are low. Meanwhile, the Boston Globe reports the same for lobstermen here in Massachusetts.

If you missed it, WBUR’s Curt Nickisch reported a fine piece from Boston Harbor as part of our ongoing series, “Looking Out.” Curt (and photographer Jess Bidgood) went out on the water at 4 in the morning to talk with commercial fishermen. You at least owe it to yourself to look at the sideshow.

And finally, you gotta see the “freak lobster” with three pincers in the Herald.

Update: Incredible albino lobster caught off Gloucester from the same guy who caught the three-pincered crustacean