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From: Robert Chauncey [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 14, 2007 6:37 AM
To: Richard Hoye; Joshua DeBruyn; Andrew Arvesen; Antony Nispel; Mark
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Martha Richards; Peg Staeheli
Subject: Emailing: To prevent crashes, a new push to improve driver
behavior csmonitor.com


 New article on Traffic Justice.  Please pass along ...
 
Bob Chauncey
        
 <http://www.csmonitor.com> 
from the February 14, 2007 edition -
http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0214/p13s01-lign.html

To prevent crashes, a new push to improve driver behavior


Methods that reduced road fatalities overseas would work in the US,
advocates say.

By Linda Baker | Contributor to The Christian Science Monitor

Despite the human and financial toll of traffic fatalities annually in
the United States - 43,000 deaths and 2.7 million injuries at a cost of
about $230 billion - such accidents are often viewed as an inevitable,
if tragic, byproduct of driving. Now a small but growing number of
safety advocates and transportation researchers want to change that
perception, partly by borrowing proven strategies from Europe and
Australia. The goal, they say, is to reduce the number of traffic deaths
- not by improving cars to limit the severity of crashes, but by
targeting human behaviors that trigger collisions in the first place. 

That strategy has worked well in the Netherlands, where over the past
three decades, the annual number of traffic fatalities has declined by
75 percent from 3,200 to 800. Today, that country has one of the lowest
per capita traffic fatality rates in the world. 

"The perspective in our society is that quite some proportion of all car
crashes are preventable," says Fred Wegman, director of the Netherlands
Institute for Road Safety Research, "and there is no need to accept the
death toll." 

Mr. Wegman visited Washington, D.C., last month for the annual meeting
of the Transportation Research Board as an independent adviser to the US
government. Improving traffic safety is not easy, he says. "You are
famously dependent on how the population perceives the problem, and
whether you can interest politicians to take action." 

Some methods used by the Netherlands to reduce road fatalities include
changing road design to limit vehicle speeds, expanding automated
enforcement and sobriety testing, and prohibiting the use of electronic
devices while driving. 

"Since the 1960s, safety campaigns in this country have focused
predominantly on crash mitigation, such as seat belts and air bags,"
says Bob Chauncey, director of a new "traffic justice" initiative for
the National Center for Bicycling and Walking, a nonprofit group in
Bethesda, Md. "With the exception of MADD [Mothers Against Drunk
Driving], we don't look at the root cause of the crash." 

The US approach to road safety is limited in scope, says David Willis, a
senior research scientist at the Texas Transportation Institute in
College Station. Forty percent of all fatal crashes in the United States
are due to speeding, he says. "But unlike almost every other civilized
society in the world, we don't focus on driver behavior - we focus on
vehicle design." 

In the Netherlands, says Mr. Wegman, speed limits are very low: 25
m.p.h. in the city, and 60 m.p.h. on the freeway. Dutch roads are also
designed to encourage safe driving. Traffic-calming strategies include
extensive bicycle and pedestrian facilities, narrow streets with
medians, and roundabouts instead of intersections with traffic signals.
Roundabouts are traffic circles that force drivers to slow down to 15
m.p.h. 

A strict police enforcement program, including random sobriety checks
and cameras that automatically identify speeders, means "you have a very
good chance of getting caught," says Wegman. The legal blood-alcohol
limit in the Netherlands is 0.05 percent compared with 0.08 percent in
the US. 

Studies conducted in London showed a 40 percent reduction in crashes
that resulted in injuries after the installation of automatic speed
cameras. In Victoria, Australia, the number of fatal crashes involving
drunken drivers declined by 25 percent after random sobriety checkpoints
were set up. 

In the US, 31 states have raised highway speed limits to 70 m.p.h. Only
four states - California, Connecticut, New York, and New Jersey - and
Washington, D.C., have passed laws against using hand-held cellphones
while driving. Most states prohibit or restrict the use of automated
speed enforcement, according to the Insurance Institute for Highway
Safety in Arlington, Va. 

"People say, 'Driving is a personal matter, government leave me alone,'
" says Steve Lind, director of the Washington State Traffic Safety
Commission. Washington State law prohibits sobriety checkpoints and bans
electronic speed enforcement except in school zones. But the benefits of
these strategies are now well documented, Mr. Lind says. "We can't be
afraid to get these tools in front of policymakers. It's up to the
people to accept them." 

Legislation, enforcement, and public awareness are the key elements for
a successful traffic safety program, Wegman says. The Netherlands' ban
on hand-held cellphones while driving, for example, would not be
effective without the accompanying media campaign on distracted driving.
"The position of the press is very important," says Wegman. 

The "traffic justice" initiative in the US, which is fueled by local
groups, aims to shift the national discussion from "car accidents" to
"car crashes," says Mr. Chauncey. Americans accept limitations on
personal freedoms in exchange for airplane safety, he says. "Now we
expect just conduct from all players in the road transportation system:
the planners, the engineers, the drivers, and the car companies." 

Although roundabouts are becoming more popular in the US, cities and
states continue to build roads that allow drivers to speed,
traffic-justice proponents say. 

"Drivers and pedestrians are victims of engineers looking at traffic
flow," says Andrea Okomski, executive director of Pedestrian InRoads, a
nonprofit in Seattle. "We know about traffic calming.... We just don't
do it." 

Full HTML version of this story which may include photos, graphics, and
related links <http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0214/p13s01-lign.html> 

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