The U.S. Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) released data showing that more people died in car crashes in the first six months of 2021 than any year since 2006 and the increase over the previous year, 18.4%, is the largest since they started collecting the data. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said in a statement:
This is actually a remarkable statement and a complete change in tone from the previous administration, and not just because he said crash, not accident. Deputy Administrator Dr. Steven Cliff had something to say about this too:
The Department of Transportation (DoT) also released a fascinating research note addressing that driving patterns and behavior changed because of the pandemic. There were fewer drivers, but the ones remaining on the road engaged in riskier behavior, including speeding, not wearing seat belts, and driving under the influence.
The note stated: “Traffic data cited in those reports showed average speeds increased during the last three quarters of 2020, and extreme speeds, those 20 miles per hour (or more) higher than the posted speed limit, became more common. These findings were supported by analyses of data from fatal crashes that show an estimated 11% increase in speeding-related fatalities.”
The note also found an increase in the rate of pedestrian deaths. To address the issue, the DoT is developing a National Roadway Safety Strategy to ensure “Safer People, Safer Roads, Safer Vehicles, Safer Speeds, and Post-Crash Care.” Stephanie Pollock, the acting Federal Highway Administration administrator, says: “Safer roads and safer speeds are key parts of addressing this crisis of fatalities and serious injuries on our roadways.”
What is remarkable about all this is the change in tone with the new administration. We have been complaining for years about the “blame the victim” attitude at the NHTSA—how they used to say “safety is a shared responsibility.” You couldn’t even walk down a sidewalk without being blamed for your own misfortune, looking at your phone instead of being ready to jump out of the way.
We at Treehugger were not alone in demanding slower and safer vehicles and more consideration of pedestrians. The point of all this is to get people out of cars and onto bikes or sidewalks, not scare them to death.
A great demonstration of the change in attitude is the difference between Pedestrian Safety Month graphics from 2020 on the left and 2021 on the right. The older one puts the onus on the pedestrian to dress up and carry a flashlight, pedestrian blaming at its worst. The newer one clearly puts the onus on the driver.
And look at this! Bump-outs at intersections that force drivers to slow down, rather than big radiused curves that let drivers zip around corners. And here is a department of the U.S. government actually relating speed to the rate of death. We have been showing this for years, but the manual for traffic control issued by the Federal Highway Administration always prioritized the motorist, making roads dangerous by design. As Greg Shill notes in the Harvard Law Review:
Perhaps that manual might finally get revised. Who knows, perhaps Buttigieg might do something about vehicle design and make trucks and SUVs as safe for pedestrians as cars, or even bring in speed limiters! We can dream.