“Ted is still remembered”: The Ted Foss Move Over Law

Aug. 31, 2020

Ted Foss Memorial Highway sign
This highway memorial sign was erected for the 20th anniversary of the death of Corporal Ted Foss and serves as a reminder to motorists to move over for emergency vehicles working on the side of the road.


Ted always wanted to be a Minnesota State Trooper. He made his dream come true, and that’s how he met his wife, Andrea. And when Ted died 20 years ago today because a driver failed to move over while he was making a traffic stop, Andrea and Ted’s law enforcement community worked tirelessly on a law in hopes that such a tragedy would never happen again. That’s how the Ted Foss Move Over Law came to be.

Andrea and Ted were a law enforcement family. They met when Ted brought a drunk driver in to the Winona County Jail – Andrea worked for the Winona Police Department. They had dinner and watched Star Trek on their first date. They got married on Sept. 15, 1990, not knowing that their marriage would be cut tragically short just shy of 10 years later.

The morning of Aug. 31, 2000, was like most others in the Foss household: getting the 2-year-old and 5-year-old to day care. Deciding on dinner plans. Heading to their respective jobs. That afternoon Andrea, who was now deputy chief of the Winona Police, learned about a crash on I-90 and assumed Ted was working it and would be home late.

But Ted wasn’t working the crash. He had died at the scene.

Ted had pulled over a van for speeding. He was talking to the driver and her fiancé about taking care of the two little ones in car seats in the back of the van when a FedEx truck struck his squad car and then the van. Ted was hit head-on. Because he was standing at the driver’s side window, there was nothing to protect him.

“I did not plan to live without my husband,” says Andrea, but “good things started filtering in out of all the darkness.” Things like her advocacy, which eventually led to the Ted Foss Move Over Law. The law requires drivers to move one full lane away from stopped emergency vehicles with flashing lights activated — ambulance, fire, law enforcement, and maintenance and construction vehicles. When the law was signed in 2001, Andrea felt “almost elation, euphoria. You know Ted’s death wasn’t for nothing, and something good came out of it and other people can be protected.”

Andrea can understand feelings on both sides of the equation. She worries about the emergency workers on the side of the road, but adds, “I can’t imagine how terrible I would feel knowing I took someone’s father or husband away for the rest of their life. What a terrible thing to carry around.”

That’s not to say she doesn’t get upset when she sees drivers breaking the Move Over Law. “I can’t help but think how absolutely thoughtless it is not to move over. It’s not hard to move over to another lane and slow down,” says Andrea. Most of the time, though, she sees motorists obeying the law: “I’ve seen lots of people slowing down and moving over and it makes me proud.”

If Ted Foss’ widow could say one thing to Minnesota drivers, it would be this: “Please slow down and move over for the people trying to keep us safe and make our roads nice to travel.”

Ted’s legacy lives on in more ways than one: His first grandchild was born last May. Andrea says, “It’s really nice that 20 years have gone by and Ted is still remembered.”

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