Driving Retards
2021-09-22 18:45:04 UTC
CARS KILL 1.3 MILLION PEOPLE (GLOBALLY) EVERY YEAR, MORE THAN MURDERS AND
SUICIDES COMBINED, AND MOST VICTIMS ARE PEDESTRIANS, BIKERS, AND
MOTORCYCLISTS
Driving is the most dangerous thing most Americans do every day. Virtually
every American knows someone whos been injured in a car crash, and each
year cars kill about as many people as guns and severely injure millions.
Its a public health crisis in any year, and somehow, the pandemic has
only made it more acute. Even as Americans have been driving less in the
past year or so, car crash deaths (including both occupants of vehicles
and pedestrians) have surged.
Cars killed 42,060 people in 2020, up from 39,107 in 2019, according to a
preliminary estimate from the National Safety Council (NSC), a nonprofit
that focuses on eliminating preventable deaths. (NSCs numbers are
typically higher than those reported by the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA) because the NSC includes car deaths in
private spaces like driveways and parking lots, and it counts deaths that
occur up to a year after a crash.)
That increase occurred even as the number of miles traveled by car
decreased by 13 percent from the previous year. It was the biggest single-
year spike in the US car fatality rate in nearly a century, and 2021 is on
pace to be even worse.
Between January and June of this year, NSC reports that car fatalities
increased by 16 percent from the same period last year, with areas as
diverse as Texas and New York City reporting sharp increases. If the trend
continues for the rest of the year, nationwide deaths would reach the
highest level since 2006. The NHTSAs preliminary data estimate a lower
but still dramatic 10.5 percent increase in car deaths between January and
March 2021 compared to the same months last year.
According to several traffic experts I spoke with, the explanation for the
2020 fatality spike is relatively straightforward: With fewer cars on the
road during quarantine, traffic congestion was all but eliminated, which
emboldened people to drive at lethal speeds. Compared to 2019, many more
drivers involved in fatal crashes also didnt wear seat belts or drove
drunk.
But why has the surge persisted and worsened this year, even as traffic
has been picking back up and nearing pre-Covid-19 levels? We dont
entirely know, but it seems to have something to do with the pandemic
altering traffic patterns.
The Covid-driven surge in car deaths shouldnt obscure what was already a
disquieting fact before the pandemic: American automotive deaths both of
pedestrians and of people in cars are a public health emergency.
In a recent report on car fatality rates in OECD nations, the US ranked
among the worst. Most of Americas peers have shown a clear downward trend
in car fatalities over the past two decades: Belgium, France, Spain, and
the Czech Republic all had per capita car death rates comparable to the US
in 2000 and have since more than halved them. Americas fatality rate has
decreased, too, over the same period but not by nearly as much, and its
started to show signs of ticking back up in the past decade.
And like so many other major causes of mortality, people of color are
disproportionately affected. Cars last year killed 23 percent more Black
Americans and 11 percent more Native Americans than they did in 2019
(compared to a 4 percent increase for white Americans).
All this isnt an inevitability traffic safety experts know the policy
interventions needed to fix the problem. The continuing surge in pandemic-
era car deaths should focus national attention on implementing them.
The tragedy of road deaths
If the federal government undertook a national project to dramatically cut
the number of people being killed by cars, one compelling starting point
could be preventing pedestrian deaths. Pedestrians are our most vulnerable
road users, and they walk in many of the same environments that are
dangerous for drivers. A pedestrian-first focus would also make motorists
safer.
The past decade has seen an extraordinary increase in the number of people
killed by cars while walking, so much so that pedestrians account for most
of the recent increase in car fatalities. Cars killed 6,205 people walking
in 2019, an increase of 51 percent from 4,109 in 2009, according to the
NHTSA. (The National Safety Council estimates a higher number, 7,700
pedestrians killed in 2019.)
People who cant afford cars are also less likely to live in neighborhoods
where its safe to walk. Black Americans, Native Americans, wheelchair
users, and people walking in low-income areas are much more likely to be
killed by a car, a structural disparity that worsened during the pandemic.
But for all the vulnerabilities of pedestrians in any given incident, most
American car deaths dont involve them. More common are crashes of two or
more cars, or just one car crashing into an object like a tree, post, or
storefront (something that happens with bizarre frequency in the US).
During the pandemic, car fatalities worsened across all regions of the US.
Deaths spiked by about the same percentage in both urban and rural
America, according to the NHTSA, though rural areas have always been
highly overrepresented and remained so in 2020. In the region comprising
Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Mississippi, which already has
above-average fatality rates, deaths rose by 7 percent in 2020 and 11
percent in the first quarter of 2021. In New England, which has the
countrys lowest car fatality rates, deaths increased by 9 percent in 2020
and increased by 1 percent in the first quarter of this year.
The tragedy of high road death rates isnt uniquely American. Worldwide,
the car death rate is even higher than in the US, and its especially bad
in the Global South. Cars kill 1.3 million people worldwide every year,
more than murders and suicides combined, and most victims are pedestrians,
bikers, and motorcyclists not car passengers, who tend to be wealthier.
Poor- and middle-income countries have more dangerous road infrastructure,
older cars with fewer safety features, higher motorcycle ridership, and
less physical separation (like bike lanes) between different types of
traffic, says Renato Vieira, an economist at the Catholic University of
Brasília.
Motorcycles will usually circulate in between the cars, so its much more
dangerous, Vieira says. The accident ratio with motorcycles is much
higher, and the fatality ratio as well.
If the world is to meet the World Health Organizations goal of halving
car fatalities by 2030, then it has much work to do. In the US, that can
start with refining our crash prevention strategy, which too often lays
the blame on bad drivers while encouraging safer behaviors among
individuals. These tactics have their place, but the priority ought to be
on the highest-impact intervention: building roads that are safer for
everyone.
Americas dangerous road design, explained
American roads have been designed for the convenience of drivers, which
means theyve been engineered for speed.
And speed is the decisive factor in a car crashs severity. Everything
else drunk driving, distracted driving, bad weather makes crashes more
likely to happen, but speed is the difference between life and death,
especially for pedestrians and bikers, who dont have the armor of a car.
A pedestrian has a 10 percent chance of dying when hit by a car at 23
miles per hour, a 25 percent chance at 32 mph, and a 75 percent chance at
50 mph.
One type of roadway thats especially dangerous is what Charles Marohn, a
municipal engineer and urban planner, calls a stroad: places that try to
be both a street, with access to shopping and leisure, and a road, where
drivers move from place to place at high speeds, but do neither well.
Stroads are pervasive throughout America. Think of the wide arterial
roads, lined with strip malls and big-box stores, that dominate the
country. These environments combine 30- or 40-plus mph speeds with
frequent turns, stopping points, and shared traffic with pedestrians and
bikes, which creates many opportunities for crashes. When we mix high-
speed cars with stopping and turning traffic, it is only a matter of time
until people get killed, Marohn writes in his recent book Confessions of
a Recovering Engineer, which explores the failures of Americas car-
dependent transportation system.
In the postwar period, they were taking this new idea of highways,
commuters, suburbs, and they said, Were going to do this everywhere,
says Marohn. If youre trying to build a whole new version of America in
two or three decades at scale across an entire continent, what you do is
you adopt really dumb, nonflexible standards, and you just repeat them
over and over and over again. Thats what we did.
Auto-centric design didnt just create unsafe stroads in the suburbs and
exurbs; it also made them pervasive in city centers, where roads
accommodated commuters arriving by car.
And when theres little traffic in the way, as has been the case during
most of the pandemic, the overly wide design of stroads encourages people
to drive very fast, regardless of the speed limit.
One victim of stroads in an urban environment was Hermanda Booker, a 29-
year-old special education teacher in Brooklyn. One day in 2017, when
Booker was walking the three blocks from her home to catch a bus to work,
an SUV turned left at a crosswalk and struck her, and then a school bus
ran her over. I cant even imagine those last moments for her, of just
terror, her sister, Rhondelle Booker, told me.
It was a notoriously dangerous intersection of two wide, high-speed roads,
where pedestrians are forced to spend a long time in the crosswalk.
Neither of the drivers were held responsible for Hermandas death, her
sister says. It was deemed a tragic accident, just an inevitable part of
how driving in America works.
Though more Americans are driving regularly this year than in 2020, fewer
people are driving during a predictable rush hour compared to before the
pandemic, Marohn says. This has made roads less jammed even as total
traffic volumes return to normal, which results in faster driving and puts
drivers and pedestrians like Booker at higher risk.
Everything that we said was happening last year where instead of having
congestion, calm traffic, you have people who are driving on roads that
are over-engineered [for speed] and theyre driving fast because nothing
is slowing them down what you have now is more drivers, a higher volume
of drivers, having that same experience, Marohn says.
Stroads are common in rural America, too, and rural areas face unique
challenges, like relatively empty roads that encourage fast driving, which
make their car death rates much higher than in urban areas. Unlike
interstates, rural highways often have no physical barrier between lanes
of opposing traffic traveling at 40, 50, 60 mph or higher a ridiculously
dangerous situation that shouldnt exist anywhere.
How to bring down car deaths
Controlling speeds on roads is the most important goal of any car safety
strategy. There are two main ways to do that: change the physical design
of the road with traffic calming measures that encourage slower driving,
like narrowing lanes and adding speed bumps, or change the legal speed
limit, which is easier and inexpensive but less effective.
Some cities that have committed to eliminating car fatalities have shown
promising results. New York Citys traffic deaths reached a low of 200 in
2018 (the lowest in a century), down from 299 five years before, after
making major citywide changes: lowering speed limits to 25 mph, installing
speed cameras, and testing traffic calming measures, like these posts
installed at dangerous turns. The suburban city of Fremont, California,
decreased fatalities and severe injuries by 45 percent between 2015 and
2020.
Other ideas have proven promising. Installing roundabouts instead of
traditional intersections is highly effective at saving lives in US rural
areas, which have death rates far above the national average because of
their high speeds and lack of physical barriers between lanes. Deaths can
be dramatically reduced with the addition of medians or central turn
lanes.
The concept of a road diet has also shown particular promise in
mitigating the dangers of roads in sparsely populated areas. Road diets
add complexity to roads by removing some traffic lanes, creating central
turn lanes to more safely manage left turns, and adding features like bike
lanes and shoulders, which are often missing from rural roads, resulting
in fatal single-car crashes. And maybe most important, it does all this
while slowing down traffic.
But the US should also look beyond its borders for solutions. Some of the
most transformative recent case studies come from abroad, and they have
much to teach Americans about whats possible.
Fortaleza, Brazil, a city of 2.7 million, cut its traffic deaths nearly in
half between 2014 and 2019 by lowering speeds, narrowing lanes, and adding
complexity to roads, like raised pedestrian crossings. In 2015, São Paulo,
Brazil, decreased speed limits on its urban highways and major roads, a
reform that reduced crashes by 21.7 percent, according to a recent study
by Vieira and economists Amanda Ang and Peter Christensen. The evidence
we have from São Paulo is very clear, Vieira says. Speed limits are very
effective.
São Paulos speed limits are automatically enforced by traffic cameras, so
drivers are highly incentivized to comply. If youre driving in São Paulo
and you go above the speed limit, youre sure youre going to get a
ticket, Vieira says. I was surprised when I was [in America] that you
dont have automatic enforcement.
Oslo, incredibly, virtually eliminated traffic deaths in 2019 by
aggressively reducing speeds, banning cars from the city center, and
building out a robust bike path network. Very slow speeds and car-free
zones are becoming the norm in many European cities.
Americans might imagine that Europeans are somehow naturally predisposed
to dense development that deprioritizes cars, but that isnt exactly true.
Car-centric development came to Europe in the mid-20th century, just as it
did to the US.
The Netherlands car fatality rate was once higher than Americas; now
its one-third of it. In the 1970s, a citizens movement called Stop de
Kindermoord, or Stop Murdering Children, protested the countrys
epidemic of death by cars. They were just sick and tired of kids being
killed in the streets, says Jason Slaughter, a Canadian immigrant in
Amsterdam who runs Not Just Bikes, an urban planning YouTube channel.
Combined with the 1973 oil crisis, public outcry helped transform Dutch
streets.
The Dutch example illustrates why street design is probably more important
than legal speed limits. When you have a big, wide, straight road in the
middle of the city, youre going to drive faster, Slaughter says its
an ingrained, subconscious part of how we drive.
Dutch streets would be unrecognizable to most North Americans. Theyre
narrow and built with plenty of traffic-calming features, like curves and
landscaping, making people naturally drive slower. They often have a
flipped design that puts the pedestrian experience at the center.
Continuous sidewalks go straight through intersections, which puts the
onus on cars to stop for pedestrians rather than the other way around.
This design style recognizes that humans make mistakes, instead of
expecting drivers to make split-second decisions in dangerous
environments. While its unlikely that pedestrian-first streets are going
to become the norm across the US overnight, similar principles can work in
the countrys more car-dominated settings.
The policy challenge
For all of the energy around finding solutions to Americas road death
emergency, the challenge of actually scaling up effective policies remains
steep.
According to Bloombergs CityLab, many American cities pursuing Vision
Zero a strategy advocated by the traffic safety nonprofit Vision Zero
Network to eliminate traffic fatalities and severe injuries have not yet
shown overwhelming success. The pandemic has further complicated their
efforts; New York City traffic deaths, after years of sustained progress,
shot up last year.
Local opposition among drivers to any perceived inconvenience can be
fierce. But state restrictions have also prevented cities from going as
far as theyd like to. To change a traffic law, local governments have to
cut through a morass of federal and state rules, and the funding thats
tied to them.
Under state law, New York City cant reduce most of its speed limits below
25 mph, which is still too high for streets shared with many pedestrians
and bikers (activists have backed a bill that would change that, which
recently passed the state Senate).
The cities need better partners at the state level and at the federal
level, says Leah Shahum, founder and director of Vision Zero Network.
They cant do this on their own. And states are given little incentive
to reduce fatalities; federal transportation money keeps flowing to them
regardless.
I would love it if states were actually penalized for rising crash
rates, says Courtney Cobbs, a co-founder of the nonprofit Better Streets
Chicago. While states are required to set safety performance targets,
Shahum calls them really embarrassingly lax; they function less as death
reduction goals than as forecasts of how many people will be allowed to
die. They are literally planning for more traffic deaths, Shahum says.
Federal standards dont just fail to set ambitious goals they also make
it exceedingly difficult for communities to make sensible design changes,
says Marohn, complaining about the stroad in front of his house in the
town of Brainerd, Minnesota. If you narrowed the lanes and made the
speeds lower, it would become way more safe just overnight, immediately.
But no city, no state is really allowed to do that. Roads have to adhere
to the rulebook that has dictated bad, speed-first design for decades, or
risk losing federal transportation aid, Marohn says.
Deviating from the rules can also put local governments legally on the
hook for crashes, which creates a strong incentive to comply even if the
established standards arent keeping people safe.
Tying federal transportation funds to state death rates might be an
effective idea, Marohn says, but only if we also throw out that rulebook.
As more cities become serious about slashing their death rates, that could
actually become feasible. Americans are only at the beginning of embracing
a people-focused road system, and their successes convincing state
policymakers to change street designs and speed limits can create a
positive feedback loop that inspires higher-level reform.
Marina Bolotnikova is a journalist in Madison, Wisconsin.
https://www.vox.com/22675358/us-car-deaths-year-traffic-covid-pandemic
SUICIDES COMBINED, AND MOST VICTIMS ARE PEDESTRIANS, BIKERS, AND
MOTORCYCLISTS
Driving is the most dangerous thing most Americans do every day. Virtually
every American knows someone whos been injured in a car crash, and each
year cars kill about as many people as guns and severely injure millions.
Its a public health crisis in any year, and somehow, the pandemic has
only made it more acute. Even as Americans have been driving less in the
past year or so, car crash deaths (including both occupants of vehicles
and pedestrians) have surged.
Cars killed 42,060 people in 2020, up from 39,107 in 2019, according to a
preliminary estimate from the National Safety Council (NSC), a nonprofit
that focuses on eliminating preventable deaths. (NSCs numbers are
typically higher than those reported by the National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration (NHTSA) because the NSC includes car deaths in
private spaces like driveways and parking lots, and it counts deaths that
occur up to a year after a crash.)
That increase occurred even as the number of miles traveled by car
decreased by 13 percent from the previous year. It was the biggest single-
year spike in the US car fatality rate in nearly a century, and 2021 is on
pace to be even worse.
Between January and June of this year, NSC reports that car fatalities
increased by 16 percent from the same period last year, with areas as
diverse as Texas and New York City reporting sharp increases. If the trend
continues for the rest of the year, nationwide deaths would reach the
highest level since 2006. The NHTSAs preliminary data estimate a lower
but still dramatic 10.5 percent increase in car deaths between January and
March 2021 compared to the same months last year.
According to several traffic experts I spoke with, the explanation for the
2020 fatality spike is relatively straightforward: With fewer cars on the
road during quarantine, traffic congestion was all but eliminated, which
emboldened people to drive at lethal speeds. Compared to 2019, many more
drivers involved in fatal crashes also didnt wear seat belts or drove
drunk.
But why has the surge persisted and worsened this year, even as traffic
has been picking back up and nearing pre-Covid-19 levels? We dont
entirely know, but it seems to have something to do with the pandemic
altering traffic patterns.
The Covid-driven surge in car deaths shouldnt obscure what was already a
disquieting fact before the pandemic: American automotive deaths both of
pedestrians and of people in cars are a public health emergency.
In a recent report on car fatality rates in OECD nations, the US ranked
among the worst. Most of Americas peers have shown a clear downward trend
in car fatalities over the past two decades: Belgium, France, Spain, and
the Czech Republic all had per capita car death rates comparable to the US
in 2000 and have since more than halved them. Americas fatality rate has
decreased, too, over the same period but not by nearly as much, and its
started to show signs of ticking back up in the past decade.
And like so many other major causes of mortality, people of color are
disproportionately affected. Cars last year killed 23 percent more Black
Americans and 11 percent more Native Americans than they did in 2019
(compared to a 4 percent increase for white Americans).
All this isnt an inevitability traffic safety experts know the policy
interventions needed to fix the problem. The continuing surge in pandemic-
era car deaths should focus national attention on implementing them.
The tragedy of road deaths
If the federal government undertook a national project to dramatically cut
the number of people being killed by cars, one compelling starting point
could be preventing pedestrian deaths. Pedestrians are our most vulnerable
road users, and they walk in many of the same environments that are
dangerous for drivers. A pedestrian-first focus would also make motorists
safer.
The past decade has seen an extraordinary increase in the number of people
killed by cars while walking, so much so that pedestrians account for most
of the recent increase in car fatalities. Cars killed 6,205 people walking
in 2019, an increase of 51 percent from 4,109 in 2009, according to the
NHTSA. (The National Safety Council estimates a higher number, 7,700
pedestrians killed in 2019.)
People who cant afford cars are also less likely to live in neighborhoods
where its safe to walk. Black Americans, Native Americans, wheelchair
users, and people walking in low-income areas are much more likely to be
killed by a car, a structural disparity that worsened during the pandemic.
But for all the vulnerabilities of pedestrians in any given incident, most
American car deaths dont involve them. More common are crashes of two or
more cars, or just one car crashing into an object like a tree, post, or
storefront (something that happens with bizarre frequency in the US).
During the pandemic, car fatalities worsened across all regions of the US.
Deaths spiked by about the same percentage in both urban and rural
America, according to the NHTSA, though rural areas have always been
highly overrepresented and remained so in 2020. In the region comprising
Texas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Mississippi, which already has
above-average fatality rates, deaths rose by 7 percent in 2020 and 11
percent in the first quarter of 2021. In New England, which has the
countrys lowest car fatality rates, deaths increased by 9 percent in 2020
and increased by 1 percent in the first quarter of this year.
The tragedy of high road death rates isnt uniquely American. Worldwide,
the car death rate is even higher than in the US, and its especially bad
in the Global South. Cars kill 1.3 million people worldwide every year,
more than murders and suicides combined, and most victims are pedestrians,
bikers, and motorcyclists not car passengers, who tend to be wealthier.
Poor- and middle-income countries have more dangerous road infrastructure,
older cars with fewer safety features, higher motorcycle ridership, and
less physical separation (like bike lanes) between different types of
traffic, says Renato Vieira, an economist at the Catholic University of
Brasília.
Motorcycles will usually circulate in between the cars, so its much more
dangerous, Vieira says. The accident ratio with motorcycles is much
higher, and the fatality ratio as well.
If the world is to meet the World Health Organizations goal of halving
car fatalities by 2030, then it has much work to do. In the US, that can
start with refining our crash prevention strategy, which too often lays
the blame on bad drivers while encouraging safer behaviors among
individuals. These tactics have their place, but the priority ought to be
on the highest-impact intervention: building roads that are safer for
everyone.
Americas dangerous road design, explained
American roads have been designed for the convenience of drivers, which
means theyve been engineered for speed.
And speed is the decisive factor in a car crashs severity. Everything
else drunk driving, distracted driving, bad weather makes crashes more
likely to happen, but speed is the difference between life and death,
especially for pedestrians and bikers, who dont have the armor of a car.
A pedestrian has a 10 percent chance of dying when hit by a car at 23
miles per hour, a 25 percent chance at 32 mph, and a 75 percent chance at
50 mph.
One type of roadway thats especially dangerous is what Charles Marohn, a
municipal engineer and urban planner, calls a stroad: places that try to
be both a street, with access to shopping and leisure, and a road, where
drivers move from place to place at high speeds, but do neither well.
Stroads are pervasive throughout America. Think of the wide arterial
roads, lined with strip malls and big-box stores, that dominate the
country. These environments combine 30- or 40-plus mph speeds with
frequent turns, stopping points, and shared traffic with pedestrians and
bikes, which creates many opportunities for crashes. When we mix high-
speed cars with stopping and turning traffic, it is only a matter of time
until people get killed, Marohn writes in his recent book Confessions of
a Recovering Engineer, which explores the failures of Americas car-
dependent transportation system.
In the postwar period, they were taking this new idea of highways,
commuters, suburbs, and they said, Were going to do this everywhere,
says Marohn. If youre trying to build a whole new version of America in
two or three decades at scale across an entire continent, what you do is
you adopt really dumb, nonflexible standards, and you just repeat them
over and over and over again. Thats what we did.
Auto-centric design didnt just create unsafe stroads in the suburbs and
exurbs; it also made them pervasive in city centers, where roads
accommodated commuters arriving by car.
And when theres little traffic in the way, as has been the case during
most of the pandemic, the overly wide design of stroads encourages people
to drive very fast, regardless of the speed limit.
One victim of stroads in an urban environment was Hermanda Booker, a 29-
year-old special education teacher in Brooklyn. One day in 2017, when
Booker was walking the three blocks from her home to catch a bus to work,
an SUV turned left at a crosswalk and struck her, and then a school bus
ran her over. I cant even imagine those last moments for her, of just
terror, her sister, Rhondelle Booker, told me.
It was a notoriously dangerous intersection of two wide, high-speed roads,
where pedestrians are forced to spend a long time in the crosswalk.
Neither of the drivers were held responsible for Hermandas death, her
sister says. It was deemed a tragic accident, just an inevitable part of
how driving in America works.
Though more Americans are driving regularly this year than in 2020, fewer
people are driving during a predictable rush hour compared to before the
pandemic, Marohn says. This has made roads less jammed even as total
traffic volumes return to normal, which results in faster driving and puts
drivers and pedestrians like Booker at higher risk.
Everything that we said was happening last year where instead of having
congestion, calm traffic, you have people who are driving on roads that
are over-engineered [for speed] and theyre driving fast because nothing
is slowing them down what you have now is more drivers, a higher volume
of drivers, having that same experience, Marohn says.
Stroads are common in rural America, too, and rural areas face unique
challenges, like relatively empty roads that encourage fast driving, which
make their car death rates much higher than in urban areas. Unlike
interstates, rural highways often have no physical barrier between lanes
of opposing traffic traveling at 40, 50, 60 mph or higher a ridiculously
dangerous situation that shouldnt exist anywhere.
How to bring down car deaths
Controlling speeds on roads is the most important goal of any car safety
strategy. There are two main ways to do that: change the physical design
of the road with traffic calming measures that encourage slower driving,
like narrowing lanes and adding speed bumps, or change the legal speed
limit, which is easier and inexpensive but less effective.
Some cities that have committed to eliminating car fatalities have shown
promising results. New York Citys traffic deaths reached a low of 200 in
2018 (the lowest in a century), down from 299 five years before, after
making major citywide changes: lowering speed limits to 25 mph, installing
speed cameras, and testing traffic calming measures, like these posts
installed at dangerous turns. The suburban city of Fremont, California,
decreased fatalities and severe injuries by 45 percent between 2015 and
2020.
Other ideas have proven promising. Installing roundabouts instead of
traditional intersections is highly effective at saving lives in US rural
areas, which have death rates far above the national average because of
their high speeds and lack of physical barriers between lanes. Deaths can
be dramatically reduced with the addition of medians or central turn
lanes.
The concept of a road diet has also shown particular promise in
mitigating the dangers of roads in sparsely populated areas. Road diets
add complexity to roads by removing some traffic lanes, creating central
turn lanes to more safely manage left turns, and adding features like bike
lanes and shoulders, which are often missing from rural roads, resulting
in fatal single-car crashes. And maybe most important, it does all this
while slowing down traffic.
But the US should also look beyond its borders for solutions. Some of the
most transformative recent case studies come from abroad, and they have
much to teach Americans about whats possible.
Fortaleza, Brazil, a city of 2.7 million, cut its traffic deaths nearly in
half between 2014 and 2019 by lowering speeds, narrowing lanes, and adding
complexity to roads, like raised pedestrian crossings. In 2015, São Paulo,
Brazil, decreased speed limits on its urban highways and major roads, a
reform that reduced crashes by 21.7 percent, according to a recent study
by Vieira and economists Amanda Ang and Peter Christensen. The evidence
we have from São Paulo is very clear, Vieira says. Speed limits are very
effective.
São Paulos speed limits are automatically enforced by traffic cameras, so
drivers are highly incentivized to comply. If youre driving in São Paulo
and you go above the speed limit, youre sure youre going to get a
ticket, Vieira says. I was surprised when I was [in America] that you
dont have automatic enforcement.
Oslo, incredibly, virtually eliminated traffic deaths in 2019 by
aggressively reducing speeds, banning cars from the city center, and
building out a robust bike path network. Very slow speeds and car-free
zones are becoming the norm in many European cities.
Americans might imagine that Europeans are somehow naturally predisposed
to dense development that deprioritizes cars, but that isnt exactly true.
Car-centric development came to Europe in the mid-20th century, just as it
did to the US.
The Netherlands car fatality rate was once higher than Americas; now
its one-third of it. In the 1970s, a citizens movement called Stop de
Kindermoord, or Stop Murdering Children, protested the countrys
epidemic of death by cars. They were just sick and tired of kids being
killed in the streets, says Jason Slaughter, a Canadian immigrant in
Amsterdam who runs Not Just Bikes, an urban planning YouTube channel.
Combined with the 1973 oil crisis, public outcry helped transform Dutch
streets.
The Dutch example illustrates why street design is probably more important
than legal speed limits. When you have a big, wide, straight road in the
middle of the city, youre going to drive faster, Slaughter says its
an ingrained, subconscious part of how we drive.
Dutch streets would be unrecognizable to most North Americans. Theyre
narrow and built with plenty of traffic-calming features, like curves and
landscaping, making people naturally drive slower. They often have a
flipped design that puts the pedestrian experience at the center.
Continuous sidewalks go straight through intersections, which puts the
onus on cars to stop for pedestrians rather than the other way around.
This design style recognizes that humans make mistakes, instead of
expecting drivers to make split-second decisions in dangerous
environments. While its unlikely that pedestrian-first streets are going
to become the norm across the US overnight, similar principles can work in
the countrys more car-dominated settings.
The policy challenge
For all of the energy around finding solutions to Americas road death
emergency, the challenge of actually scaling up effective policies remains
steep.
According to Bloombergs CityLab, many American cities pursuing Vision
Zero a strategy advocated by the traffic safety nonprofit Vision Zero
Network to eliminate traffic fatalities and severe injuries have not yet
shown overwhelming success. The pandemic has further complicated their
efforts; New York City traffic deaths, after years of sustained progress,
shot up last year.
Local opposition among drivers to any perceived inconvenience can be
fierce. But state restrictions have also prevented cities from going as
far as theyd like to. To change a traffic law, local governments have to
cut through a morass of federal and state rules, and the funding thats
tied to them.
Under state law, New York City cant reduce most of its speed limits below
25 mph, which is still too high for streets shared with many pedestrians
and bikers (activists have backed a bill that would change that, which
recently passed the state Senate).
The cities need better partners at the state level and at the federal
level, says Leah Shahum, founder and director of Vision Zero Network.
They cant do this on their own. And states are given little incentive
to reduce fatalities; federal transportation money keeps flowing to them
regardless.
I would love it if states were actually penalized for rising crash
rates, says Courtney Cobbs, a co-founder of the nonprofit Better Streets
Chicago. While states are required to set safety performance targets,
Shahum calls them really embarrassingly lax; they function less as death
reduction goals than as forecasts of how many people will be allowed to
die. They are literally planning for more traffic deaths, Shahum says.
Federal standards dont just fail to set ambitious goals they also make
it exceedingly difficult for communities to make sensible design changes,
says Marohn, complaining about the stroad in front of his house in the
town of Brainerd, Minnesota. If you narrowed the lanes and made the
speeds lower, it would become way more safe just overnight, immediately.
But no city, no state is really allowed to do that. Roads have to adhere
to the rulebook that has dictated bad, speed-first design for decades, or
risk losing federal transportation aid, Marohn says.
Deviating from the rules can also put local governments legally on the
hook for crashes, which creates a strong incentive to comply even if the
established standards arent keeping people safe.
Tying federal transportation funds to state death rates might be an
effective idea, Marohn says, but only if we also throw out that rulebook.
As more cities become serious about slashing their death rates, that could
actually become feasible. Americans are only at the beginning of embracing
a people-focused road system, and their successes convincing state
policymakers to change street designs and speed limits can create a
positive feedback loop that inspires higher-level reform.
Marina Bolotnikova is a journalist in Madison, Wisconsin.
https://www.vox.com/22675358/us-car-deaths-year-traffic-covid-pandemic