Your story is about a car carrier that was making a right turn. Nothing but poor trained driver, with a super long vehicle try to make a turn on a street that was not design for trucks.
(1) He wasn't even supposed to be on that street. It's not a legal through truck route. He was supposed to have left the road at least a block earlier.(2) His brakes were defective.
(3) He hadn't learned the topography and was coming down a steep hill.
(4) He was speeding.
(5) He didn't even know the geometry and didn't realize until quite late that he had to turn (the road ends at a T).
As a result he attempted to turn at the last minute and went slamming into the building AHEAD of him to the right. There were NO extenuating circumstances.
Compare the standards we have for railroad engineers.
They let any incompetent operate a commercial truck. They have very high standards for railroad engineers and conductors, including the "know the territory" requirement. If we keep our trucking standards THIS low, I would advocate for the total removal of any "know the territory" requirement for train engineers, just for fairness.
I've been told that it would take three months of "route familiarization" to train engineers to run a train route like a daily Cardinal. This is a ridiculously high standard, given that the train *is on tracks*.
In the trucking industry, they just send truckers out in commercial operation to routes they've never seen before, not even once. Same in the bus industry. This is far too *little* familiarization.
This situation is a government subsidy to trucks and buses at the expense of trains.