House committee to hold hearing on soaring U.S. traffic deaths
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[June 08, 2022]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A U.S. House of
Representatives subcommittee on Wednesday is holding a hearing on
soaring American traffic deaths and efforts to build safer roads.
Last year, traffic deaths jumped 10.5% to 42,915 marking the highest
number killed on U.S. roads in a single-year since 2005.
Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton, the Transportation and
Infrastructure subcommittee chair holding the hearing, called the
hearing "exceptionally timely."
The preliminary yearly increase reported is the highest since the
National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) began using its
traffic fatality tracking system in 1975.
Congress, as part of a $1 trillion infrastructure bill in 2021, approved
$5 billion for local governments to improve roadway safety.
The subcommittee will hear witnesses from the National
League of Cities, the American Association of State Highway
Transportation Officials (AASHTO), the Washington Area Bicycle
Association and the American Traffic Safety Services Association.
People outside cars are especially vulnerable.
The number of pedestrians killed in 2021 jumped 13% to 7,342, the
highest number since 1981, while the number of people on bicycles killed
rose 5% to 985, the highest number since at least 1975, NHTSA said.
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Travelers are stuck in a traffic jam as people hit the road before
the busy Thanksgiving Day weekend in Chicago, Illinois, U.S.,
November 21, 2017. REUTERS/Kamil Krzaczynski/File Photo
Advocates for Highway and Auto Safety urged Congress
to work "to prevent traffic fatalities by minimizing roadway
conflicts and reducing crash forces when they do occur results" by
"reducing speeds, road safety infrastructure improvements and better
post-crash management."
It also wants the NHTSA to set new rules requiring "minimum
performance standards for advanced driver assistance systems and
requirements for adaptive beam headlights, improved hood and bumper
standards."
In January, the Transportation Department released a strategy
designed to cut traffic deaths. "We face a crisis on our roadways,"
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said.
U.S. traffic deaths surged after pandemic lockdowns ended in 2020 as
more drivers engaged in unsafe behavior. Traffic deaths are now up
18% over pre-pandemic 2019 levels, while driving has now returned to
2019 levels.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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