Mike Tomars spends most days inside his darkened St. Paul home, trying to stave off the headaches and nausea that have plagued him since a semitrailer truck rear-ended the company car he was driving five years ago during a blizzard.
The crash fractured his skull and left Tomars, 55, with such severe head injuries that he won't be able to work again. Once an enthusiastic gardener and successful insurance claims investigator, Tomars now can't stand bright sunshine or noisy crowds. He can't even read for very long.
"After, like, 45 minutes to an hour, I start having a panic attack," he said. "My neurologist explained that part of my brain is dead."
Even though the trucking company settled with Tomars for $300,000 above its $1 million insurance policy, he and his relatives fear he will end up on public assistance someday because the money won't cover his long-term living expenses.
Large general freight trucks are required to have $750,000 in liability insurance — a minimum that hasn't changed in the past 30 years. In Minnesota, the minimum is lower for large commercial trucks that don't leave the state: $100,000 per person or $300,000 per crash.
The Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, which regulates the trucking industry, is considering whether to require truckers to carry higher insurance policies. While catastrophic trucking crashes are relatively rare, a government study found that the current minimum has not kept pace with medical costs. The $750,000 minimum set in 1985 equated to $3.2 million in 2013, the agency reported.
A possible increase, backed by plaintiffs' lawyers and safety advocates, is raising protests from small trucking companies — which are the vast majority of carriers. Their owners contend that higher insurance premiums could drive them out of business.
The federal agency noted that inflation-adjusted insurance rates have declined over the years, however.