We’ve all heard the argument that a bright neon yellow vest becomes tactically unsound in the event a gunfight breaks out. I’ll concede that there probably is something to that, but counter with the argument that you can use your tactics and training to find cover/concealment and stop the deadly threat with your superior gunfighting skills. In contrast, you cannot outsmart two tons of steel and aluminum hurtling at you at 60+ miles per hour.
I have no idea whether or not any (or all) of those abovementioned LEOs who perished in a “struck by” incident this year were wearing a reflective vest. Perhaps they were.
I have not taken a formal, scientific survey, but from anecdotal, experiential knowledge, I would estimate that of the thousands of times I’ve passed a police officer at a roadside incident, I could count on one hand the number of times I’ve smiled at seeing that ugly reflective vest.
As I slow down and move over, I'm disappointed to see dark blue instead of neon yellow.
A policy change needs to happen—astonishingly, some agencies do not require the use of reflective vests.