West-Press Printing Health Care Sierra Tucson Eating Disorders Program Coordinator Finance and Accounting Charles E. Gillman Company Accounting Specialist Administrative & Professional Jorgensen Brooks Group Counselor Health Care Dependable Health Services Physical Therapists Health Care CENTRAL ARIZONA COLLEGE DIRECTOR OF HEALTH INFORMATION MANAGEMENT Sales and Marketing Everready Glass Sales Reps BusinessU-Haul discounts story on accidentsNewspaper faults firm's standards for rental trailers
the associated press
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 06.26.2007
LOS ANGELES — Phoenix-based U-Haul International, the nation's largest provider of rental trailers, says it is "highly conservative" about safety, despite a newspaper investigation that shows company practices have increased the risk of towing accidents.
U-Haul lets its trailers remain in use for months without thorough inspections, a violation of company policy, according to a report by the Los Angeles Times. Bad brakes are a recurring problem with the company's large trailers, and its midsize trailers have no brakes at all, the newspaper said.
Compounding this, U-Haul allows customers to pull trailers as heavy as or heavier than their own vehicles even though the safest way to tow is just the opposite — with a vehicle that weighs much more than the trailer. These allowances conflict with safety recommendations of many auto manufacturers.
The result: Trailers have been known to begin swinging violently when drivers travel downhill or are shaken by a sharp turn, leading to serious accidents.
The yearlong investigation by the Los Angeles Times into U-Haul's practices included more than 200 interviews and a review of thousands of pages of court records, police reports, consumer complaints and other documents.
In the company's view, many customers load the trailers incorrectly, drive too fast or fail to follow safety instructions. Distribution of the U-Haul's user guide, however, is spotty even though many renters are novices as young as 18.
U-Haul defends maintenance
U-Haul, which took in about $1.5 billion from equipment rentals last year, defends its safety record. Company executives say they diligently maintain the fleet of more than 200,000 trucks and trailers rented out of its 14,500 independent dealers.
U-Haul said drivers towing its trailers are less likely to crash than other drivers because they drive more safely when moving families and belongings.
"Our equipment is suited for your son and daughter," said Edward J. "Joe" Shoen, chairman of U-Haul and its parent company, Amerco. "On a scale of 1 to 10, I'd say U-Haul is rated 10 in safety."
U-Haul listed 173 sway-related accidents from 1993 to 2003 involving a single trailer model in a lawsuit stemming from a 2003 crash that left a 19-year-old in a wheelchair with brain damage. In other cases, the company listed up to 650 sway-related accidents from 1990 to 2002.
Tow dollies faulted
The company's tow dollies used to pull vehicles are also vulnerable to sway.
Casey Curtis, who rented a U-Haul dolly in 2002, said he was never asked what he planned to tow and did not know weight could be a problem. Curtis used the dolly to hitch his Suzuki Samurai to tow a Geo Tracker and while going downhill in Utah in high winds, the dolly began to slide side-to-side.
The trailer came loose and flipped and Curtis hit a car.
"They didn't even ask me what I was towing," said Curtis, who had only minor injuries.
Airline pilot Chris Burke's family wasn't so lucky. Burke was moving his family from Indiana to Florida in 2002, towing a Ford Contour that fishtailed, causing Burke's Explorer to smash into a guardrail and flip. Burke's infant son, Ryan, suffered a fractured skull, and his wife Corry, 25, sustained paralyzing spinal-cord damage. She is now a paraplegic.
Despite the company's claim that Burke was driving too fast, a jury awarded the family about $11.6 million in damages.
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