Truck-related fatalities keep dropping stateside

WASHINGTON — There’s at least one bright side to the economic recession in the US: Double-digit declines in highway traffic fatalities.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration reports that fatalities dropped 9.7 percent between 2007 and 2008, from 41,259 to 37,261.

The economic slowdown was likely a key factor, but the fatal accident rate also fell to an historic low of an estimated 1.27 deaths per 100 million vehicle miles traveled. That’s an estimate based on a trend — final 2008 VMT numbers have not been compiled yet.

There was good news for trucking, as well. The number of people killed in large-truck crashes fell 12 percent year-to-year, from 4,822 to 4,229.

The number of deaths among truck occupants dropped from 805 to 677, a 16 percent improvement. Included in that total are 72 fewer deaths in single-vehicle crashes and 56 fewer deaths in multi-vehicle crashes.

There also were significantly fewer fatalities among the occupants of other vehicles involved in heavy-truck crashes. The number dropped from 3,608 in 2007 to 3,139 in 2008, a 13 percent improvement.

Rose McMurray, acting deputy administrator of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, says on the car side, vehicles have become more crashworthy, and safety belt use has increased.

The one negative in the new numbers is an increase in fatalities among "nonoccupants" in heavy-truck crashes — pedestrians, bicyclists and motorcyclists. That number went up from 409 in 2007 to 413 in 2008, a one percent increase.

McMurray added a precaution. "I do think that the economy does play a fairly significant role in the encouragement of these numbers. I think we have to be mindful that as freight demand rises, we have to be ever more vigilant to get these numbers where we want them to be."

The trucking and safety enforcement communities issued statements lauding the gains.

Steve Campbell, executive director of the Commercial Vehicle Safety Alliance, which represents safety enforcement interests, said, "Clearly, focusing on educating drivers and enforcing the law on high-risk operators is paying off with the number of lives we are saving. While we may never achieve the goal of zero deaths, we should still continue to strive for that goal."

— via Truckinginfo.com 


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