The
bed of a pick-up truck is for CARGO, not people. If you
care about your passengers (or your pets), do not allow them
to ride in the back of your truck. You may be the best driver
in the world -- but you are not always totally alert
while you are driving. You never know when some other driver
may cut you off or cause a collision some other way. Don't
put people or animals at risk by allowing them to ride in
unprotected places.
In a collision, the sudden deceleration or
other crash forces will launch the person out of the bed.
Most of the time, no amount of "holding on" can
prevent this (even at slower speeds). In some collisions I
have attended, pick-up bed passengers thrown out this way
have been subsequently run over by the vehicle -- or other
vehicles.
In a neighborhood close to mine, a young
woman riding in the open back of a Jeep was thrown out and
crushed when the Jeep rolled over her after being hit by another
vehicle. That car had run a stop sign.
This was a young lady that NEVER went without a seat belt,
except, reportedly, that one time. There weren't enough seat
belts to go around, so she had her friends sit where the
seat belts were. She was just seventeen, a great kid, and
I'm sure her family still misses her deeply.
Some drivers allow passengers in the back
of a pick-up only when the bed is covered by a camper
shell -- they believe this affords the occupants some protection
in a crash. Think about that for a minute. Have you ever seen
how camper shells are constructed? In most cases, they are
not very substantial, and they are certainly not capable of
providing any protection to a passenger. In a roll-over crash,
a camper shell will likely crush like an aluminum can. If
your truck has roll bar protection in the back, and seat positions
with seat belts and shoulder harnesses, then maybe it is OK
for someone to ride there -- but not otherwise.
While many states do not have specific
laws that make riding in a pick-up bed illegal, some may
have laws that make it illegal for certain specific people
to ride there. In Arizona, for example, we have a child
safety restraint law that requires any passenger under
the age of five to be placed into a child seat and the seat
to be buckled into the vehicle properly. The way this law
is worded, it makes it illegal for a child under five to be
placed anywhere in the vehicle there is no seat belt. Normally,
the people that ride with me are people I care about; so,
law or no law, people and pets ride IN my truck, strapped
safely into place, not unprotected in the open bed.
<Rule
64: Avoid Head Injuries!
Rule 66: Secure Loose Objects>